The Russian Ministry of Finance's latest statement supports non-professional investors entering the cryptocurrency market. However, this openness is not unconditional—the investment limits must be strictly controlled, and participants can only operate through trading platforms registered and regulated by the Russian authorities. This means that the threshold for cryptocurrency trading is no longer completely closed, but multiple safeguards have been put in place at the regulatory level. From a policy perspective, Russia's attitude towards crypto assets is gradually adjusting—aiming to activate market participation while preventing retail investor risks—this balanced approach is becoming increasingly common in global regulation.
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GmGmNoGn
· 8h ago
Russia's move this time is quite bold. They say they're open, but in reality, it's all rules and restrictions, and you still have to use official platforms... Isn't this just a way to firmly control the retail investors?
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LiquidityHunter
· 8h ago
Still watching this news at 3 a.m... Has the liquidity depth data from the Russian official platform been released? Without genuine trading pair spread data, I don't really trust this kind of "openness."
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 8h ago
Russia's move is just regulation under a different guise, still the same old approach.
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ApeWithNoFear
· 8h ago
Another game of "open but conditional," essentially just keeping retail investors in a cage.
The Russian Ministry of Finance's latest statement supports non-professional investors entering the cryptocurrency market. However, this openness is not unconditional—the investment limits must be strictly controlled, and participants can only operate through trading platforms registered and regulated by the Russian authorities. This means that the threshold for cryptocurrency trading is no longer completely closed, but multiple safeguards have been put in place at the regulatory level. From a policy perspective, Russia's attitude towards crypto assets is gradually adjusting—aiming to activate market participation while preventing retail investor risks—this balanced approach is becoming increasingly common in global regulation.