Bank of Russia Issues New Rules for Digital Asset Investments

Source: CryptoNewsNet Original Title: Bank of Russia issues new rules for digital asset investments Original Link:

Overview

The Central Bank of Russia (CBR) has updated the rules governing investment in Russian digital financial assets (DFAs). The regulation concerns products like tokenized real assets and digital rights, purchased by professional and retail investors on the domestic market.

New Requirements for DFA Investors and Instruments

Russia’s monetary authority has published new rules for the acquisition of digital financial assets by both “qualified” and “non-qualified” investors in the country.

The regulations apply to DFAs as defined by the Russian law “On Digital Financial Assets” from 2021, which covers instruments such as tokenized securities and other real assets as well as digital rights.

Unlike cryptocurrencies, these products are issued on private blockchains managed by operators approved by the CBR, although the bank intends to permit their circulation on public networks next year to help Russian companies attract foreign investment.

Access Tiers for Retail Investors

According to the central bank’s directive, non-qualified investors will be free to acquire the most popular DFAs, with payouts independent of any variable indicators. That includes debt assets as well.

Starting in 2026, the same group of retail investors will also be granted access to DFAs with returns dependent on changes in indicators such as inflation, the key interest rate and the prices of precious metals and stocks.

Their purchases will be capped at a maximum of 600,000 rubles (nearly $7,700). However, the annual limit will be subject to correction — if the digital assets are redeemed or sold within a year, the owner will have the right to buy additional DFAs with the proceeds.

Quality and Risk Standards

The document amends the classification of all DFAs available in the Russian market. Regardless of who’s buying them, they must have high credit ratings. Some of them must also provide capital protection, meaning they offer the return of the initial investment.

Acceptable rating levels for DFAs and their issuers will be established by a decision of the Board of Directors of the Bank of Russia.

Digital financial assets that carry increased risks will be accessible exclusively to qualified investors. The same applies to tokenized versions of securities.

Legal entities acquiring digital rights will not be subject to any restrictions under the Bank of Russia’s updated framework.

Context: New Crypto Policy Framework

The announcement of the new regulations for investments in Russian digital financial assets comes after the CBR published the key points in its new regulatory concept for crypto in December.

The strategy aims to recognize cryptocurrencies and stablecoins as currency or monetary assets and widen investor access to decentralized digital assets.

The Central Bank of Russia suggests permitting qualified investors to obtain any crypto they want, except anonymous coins. It also envisages allowing non-qualified investors to buy the most liquid digital currencies like Bitcoin for up to 300,000 rubles annually (around $3,800).

The proposals have been submitted to the federal government and Russian lawmakers are expected to adopt the respective amendments by July 1, 2026.

Market Impact and Forecasts

One of the main changes will be the authorization of Russian entities to issue DFAs on public networks to attract capital from abroad.

According to forecasts, the Russian market for crypto investment products may exceed 2 trillion rubles next year, or over $25 billion at current exchange rates.

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TokenEconomistvip
· 4h ago
actually, the cbr's move here is textbook regulatory arbitrage—think of it like traditional central banks finally admitting the token economy exists, ceteris paribus their previous denial. let me break this down: they're essentially creating a legal framework where DFAs = traditional securities, just with blockchain underneath. classic case of institutional lag catching up to market reality.
Reply0
MeaninglessApevip
· 12h ago
The Russian Central Bank has introduced new regulations again, truly impressive. Is this a move to fully embrace tokenization or just a prelude to another round of harvesting retail investors?
View OriginalReply0
SandwichVictimvip
· 12h ago
The Russian Central Bank is at it again, and the regulatory measures are really hard to understand...
View OriginalReply0
MetaRecktvip
· 12h ago
The Russian Central Bank is up to something new again... Will it work this time?
View OriginalReply0
NFTBlackHolevip
· 12h ago
The Russian Central Bank is doing this, it seems they still want to control the market. The water is too deep in tokenized assets.
View OriginalReply0
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