THE Central Bank of Myanmar (CBM) warned individuals not to engage in buying, selling, transferring, or saving of cryp­tocurrency assets, according to its notification dated 16 No­vember.

 

CBM announced on 3 May 2019 through state-run news­papers that digital currencies, including cryptocurrency, are not allowed to be traded personally or virtually. CBM declared digital currencies, including cryptocurrency, ille­gal currencies. CBM has not granted permits to any financial institutions to deal with digital currencies, according to its noti­fication released on 15 May 2020. The governments of many coun­tries, such as China, India, Al­geria, Bolivia, Egypt, Nepal, Pakistan, Vietnam, Indonesia, Angola, and Colombia, stated that digital currency like cryp­tocurrency is not legal tender. Though they are not regulat­ed in many countries as legal currency, some are qualified as digital assets.

 

China bans crypto crack­down and pledges wider E-CNY use as a digital representation of the Chinese. CBM is also re­searching to create a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).

 

Some governments prohib­it the use of cryptocurrencies. Nevertheless, their popularity among people is accumulating and saving and trading crypto is growing as our world is chang­ing rapidly.

 

Some people expect prof­it from high price volatility in crypto trading. Lack of bank investment made crypto assets attractive for illegal activities such as drug trafficking, arms smuggling, human trafficking, online scams and money laun­dering (AML/CFT) as they can evade taxes.

 

The UK and the US brought charges of money laundering and involvement in online scams against Cambodian business­man Mr Chen Zhi and sanctions assets from his Prince Group, according to the CBM, citing a BBC Burmese statement on 16 October 2025.

 

Additionally, the US gov­ernment seized approximately US$14 billion worth of digital currency Bitcoins for digital currency fraud linked to phish­ing scams with forced labour camps, making it the largest Bitcoin seizure and largest fi­nancial crackdown in history and causing the Bitcoin market to drop by about 10 per cent.

 

The historic crypto crack­down proved that governments can track down and control crypto assets. Consequently, that makes criminals more cautious with the use of cryp­tocurrencies and likely reduces the use of Bitcoin.

 

The unregulated crypto market poses a significant risk to investors to experience finan­cial losses due to rapid price swings, weak regulation and high vulnerability to hacking and online security breaches. Thus, CBM reiterates its warn­ings to the public not to conduct illegal activities like buying, sell­ing, transferring, and holding crypto assets. CBM encourag­es the public to use legitimate transactions only through au­thorized banks. — NN/KK