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Russia: Turning Cryptocurrency into a "State-Selected Asset"
Article by: Conflux
Russia is preparing a comprehensive crypto regulatory framework to provide legal protection for crypto assets and compliance trading channels.
Now, this process has seen the latest developments: the Russian government has approved a draft law on cryptocurrencies, planning to incorporate it into the national legal system within this year. Under the draft, exchanges will be allowed to list only leading digital assets whose market capitalization, trading volume, and trading history meet strict standards, while the annual investment limits for ordinary investors are also clearly capped.
This means that Russia isn’t simply “opening up crypto,” but instead is filtering out controllable top-tier assets, with legal protection and regulatory screening implemented in parallel—safeguarding investors’ rights while preventing the market from getting out of control.
Screening, not opening up
The draft stipulates that crypto assets allowed for trading must meet three hard indicators:
Market cap: average over the past two years exceeds $60 billion
Daily average trading volume: exceeds $12 billion
Trading history: at least five years
That is to say, only super top-tier coins such as Bitcoin and Ethereum are eligible to enter the market. Other smaller and mid-sized projects are directly excluded. This echoes a ruling made by the Russian Constitutional Court in January: the state recognizes its property rights, but enforces them only within the scope of controllable assets.
A controllable crypto ecosystem
The most core part of this system is not the threshold, but that the list is decided by the central bank.
That is to say:
Which coins can be traded
Which coins can be held
Which coins must be banned
Everything is decided by Russia’s central bank. Even Russia’s financial intelligence agency has an additional power—directly “blacklisting” certain crypto assets. The most clearly defined category among them is: privacy coins.
In fact, this conveys a very clear signal: crypto assets can exist, but only on the premise that they are “regulatable, trackable, and controllable.”
The draft also explicitly defines cryptocurrencies and stablecoins as “monetary assets,” meaning they enter the legally recognized monetary system rather than being merely speculative tools.
But at the same time, Russia has also imposed a limitation: ordinary people’s annual investment cap is $4,000. This creates a very typical structure: the state recognizes them as “money,” but doesn’t allow it to become “free money.”
A different approach
If you compare Russia’s logic with other global mainstream markets, you’ll find that it takes a different route and follows a completely different regulatory path.
United States:
Bind stablecoins to the U.S. dollar system
Use market mechanisms to expand the influence of the U.S. dollar
Make private institutions the issuance entities
Hong Kong:
Attract institutions to enter via a licensing regime
Emphasize “compliance + innovation”
Attempt to become a global liquidity hub
Russia’s path, meanwhile, is: state-led + asset screening + risk containment.
Behind this, there are actually three completely different financial philosophies:
United States: expansion
Hong Kong: connection
Russia: control
The state logic under the rules
From the perspective of the crypto industry, Russia’s rules are very strict; but from the standpoint of national financial security, they are very reasonable:
Prevent capital outflows
Avoid shocks from uncontrollable assets to the financial system
Maintain absolute control over the flow of funds
Especially in the current global financial game environment, Russia more than needs a controllable alternative system rather than an open new system. Top-tier digital assets are allowed to circulate, but the market as a whole remains under state control.
A future template?
At international forums such as the G20, countries’ regulatory stances toward cryptocurrencies are gradually converging—exploring their potential value while preventing risks. Russia’s “selective model” may offer other countries a new way of thinking: rather than banning everything, concentrate efforts on regulating top-tier assets.
For certain countries seeking financial sovereignty and unwilling to be fully dependent on the existing international financial system, this model has tremendous appeal. Its biggest advantage lies in:
No need for fully opening up
No need to accept the dollar system
Still able to leverage the liquidity of crypto assets
If more and more countries adopt similar structures, the global crypto landscape could be reshaped—from a single unified market to a new configuration of state-based zones and tiered regulation.
For industry participants, this means: crypto assets are no longer just speculative tools, but may become controllable, actionable foundational assets within each country’s financial system.
And for countries focused on financial sovereignty, this model provides a path that balances innovation and security—allowing them to participate in global value flows while maintaining absolute control over systemic risks.
*This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice. There are risks in the market; investment requires caution.