China to Airdrop $3M Crypto Ahead of Chinese Black Friday

2020-12-4 20:13

In China, the Suzhou government released a blog post on Dec. 4 announcing a 20 million yuan giveaway in the digital currency called DC/EP.

Any of the city’s 10.7 million residents can register for the airdrop between Dec. 5 and Dec. 6, and winners will receive “red packets” worth 200 yuan or about $30.

The announcement follows months after a $1.5 million airdrop in Shenzen, where 50,000 residents received crypto to spend in 3,000 different stores around the city. The digital yuan pilot has so far focused on Chengdu, Suzhou, Shenzhen, and Xiong’An.

However, the government has plans to expand the pilot over time. 

The WHO reports that the rise of digital currencies and other contactless payment solutions in China has helped curb the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Chinese Black Friday

Suzhou will announce the lottery winners on Dec. 11, the day before a major shopping event in China similar to Black Friday in the U.S.

The Double 12 online shopping festival takes place once a year and brought in $38 billion in sales for Alibaba alone last year, all within 24 hours. 

Unlike the larger Double 11 event in November, Double 12 focuses on smaller e-commerce vendors in China. Suzhou likely aims to stimulate some economic activity with the timing of the airdrop. 

Airdrop winners can spend their digital yuan up until the 27 at supported vendors, including some stores on major e-commerce platform JD.com.

Some winners will also be asked to trial their new crypto wallets’ offline payment feature.

Similar to Notcoin - Blum - Airdrops In 2024

origin »

Chinese Yuan (CNY) на Currencies.ru

$ 716910.46 (+0.00%)
Объем 24H $0
Изменеия 24h: 0.00 %, 7d: 0.00 %
Cегодня L: $681124.43 - H: $716910.46
Капитализация $0 Rank 99999
Цена в час новости $ 124424.29 (476.18%)

chinese black friday ahead crypto airdrop china

chinese black → Результатов: 4


Фото:

Trade War Between China and USA Affects GPU Tariffs, Cryptocurrency Mining to be Affected

President Trump’s latest tariffs on Chinese goods could lead to an increase of graphics cards from both AMD and NVIDIA in the following months, reported CNBC on September 27, 2018.   In a competitive mining scene where profit margins are slim, even the slightest increase in costs could mean the difference from being in the black and being in the red.

2018-9-30 18:00