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Topic: Russia To Legalize Use Of Cryptocurrency In International Trade - page 3. (Read 587 times)

legendary
Activity: 3752
Merit: 1864
The only purposes this "solution" has are:
- an attempt to show that Russia will be able to "dodge" the sanctions that from January 1, 2023 will fully hit its oil and gas sector.
- but like most "solutions" this is an ordinary Russian idiotic decision Smiley The problem is that the sanctions speak of a ban on the purchase of this raw material from Russia, for example, by the European Union. Those. The EU will not buy oil at all, not for dollars or euros!
- China and India are unlikely to rush to buy bitcoin now in order to buy Russian oil and gas that no one needs in the short term! Why ? Because Russia simply has nowhere to store its oil and gas, and if they wait a bit, they will sell it for $10 and $1 each Smiley And India and China still do not hesitate to pay the country to a terrorist. I am sure that after the ban in the EU, they will not stop buying either. But as "Russia's best friends" - of course for a penny, forcing Russia to comply with all their demands. Since Russia will simply have nowhere to go Smiley
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 5637
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Too much noise for no reason when it comes to Russia - because their legalization of what they call "cryptocurrencies" is taking much longer than it has been for the past few months. In the end, it all came down to a bunch of unverified information and recycling of old news.

Two key things that are recycled in the article are the mention of Bitcoin as a means of payment for countries that would like it when it comes to trading with Russia, but isn't it ironic that they mention Turkey that has banned Bitcoin as a means of payment, or China that has banned everything what does it have to do with cryptocurrencies? The second, even more important fact is what the great leader thinks about it, and he clearly said that he does not think it is an option.

Will the Russians start using their cryptocurrency or will the Chinese use their digital yuan in international trade is a much more meaningful question than whether they will use Bitcoin. In the event that Bitcoin is in such a focus, it will not be anything good because then it will become just another target that will need to be sanctioned.
hero member
Activity: 1778
Merit: 722
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That's not surprising for me at all to see Russia doing that and when they said international trade this means they will only allow the people who are near the government to trade with cryptocurrencies because as far as I know in Russia mostly the rich people and the people who are actively doing international trades are near to the government and somehow related together, so that was very much expected to see Russia letting these people to any cryptocurrencies trades without of any problem because these people are also helping the government with the economic sanctions which can be important for the government.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
It always gives me a bad feeling when they use the term "cryptocurrency" instead of just "bitcoin". This has been an ongoing trend, recently Iran publicly announced the same thing also, someone even mentioned Tether which I can only hope they did it out of being uninformed instead of being stupid enough to actually think a centralized shitcoin that can be frozen is a good option to use!

Curious as to what may have prompted this latest development in russian monetary policy. What is the motive behind this?
A couple of years ago I said the world is moving away from US dollar but at the time they were still arguing about the replacement. My analysis was that they came up with a couple of options instead of just one.
- Gold (a lot of international trades have already happened using gold directly)
- Each country's own currency (as it was also mentioned in the quote above)
- Alternative payment systems to replace SWIFT like the Russian SPFS
- Finally bitcoin was discussed at that time
(we later learned about gov-coins or CBDCs that seems to be another option, the Chinese one is claimed to have already processed a huge amount of transactions)
My point is that the Russian sanctions aren't the cause of this move, they are the catalyst. This has been going on for a couple of years at least. The reason is just the introduction of the New World Order; a large part of US dominance is in dollar. Take that away and it removes a big chunk of it.

P.S. I'm mostly curious about what each of these countries are going to do about the volatility.
legendary
Activity: 2562
Merit: 1441
Quote
  • Russia is close to pushing legislation for the use of cryptocurrency in international trade.
  • In current conditions “it is impossible to do without cross-border settlements in cryptocurrency,” the Bank of Russia and Ministry of Finance have reportedly agreed.
  • The necessary regulatory framework will still need to be introduced.

The Bank of Russia and the country’s Ministry of Finance have reconsidered their positions toward cryptocurrency, acknowledging it to be necessary to legalize the use of cryptocurrencies in cross-border settlements, per a report by local news outlet TASS.

According to TASS, the two government bodies have agreed that “it is impossible” to continue without enabling cryptocurrency as a legal payment method for international trade.

The move comes as Russia dabbles on how to best regulate the Bitcoin and cryptocurrency markets. Swamped in Western sanctions, the world’s largest country has sought alternatives to the U.S. dollar so as to guarantee the efficient trade of its commodities.

In March, the chairman of the country’s Congressional energy committee, Pavel Zavalny, said the country was open to taking payments for natural gas and other natural resources exports in bitcoin.

“When it comes to our ‘friendly’ countries, like China or Turkey, which don’t pressure us, then we have been offering them for a while to switch payments to national currencies, like rubles and yuan,” Zavalny said at the time. “With Turkey, it can be lira and rubles. So there can be a variety of currencies, and that’s a standard practice. If they want bitcoin, we will trade in bitcoin.”

In May, it was reported that Russia was “actively discussing” using cryptocurrency in international trade.

Now, the imminent actualization of such a move shifts the tide as President Vladimir Putin last year had dismissed the possibility in an interview at the Russian Energy Week event in Moscow.

“I believe that it has value,” Putin said at the time, referring to bitcoin. “But I don’t believe it can be used in the oil trade.”

According to TASS, the necessary regulatory framework to enable cross-border settlements in cryptocurrency in Russia will still be introduced.

https://bitcoinmagazine.com/business/russia-to-legalize-use-of-crypto-in-international-trade


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Russia's energy committee announced they were open to accepting payments for natural gas and other commodity exports in bitcoin as of march 2022.

While Putin is quoted as saying bitcoin has value but may not be fit for use in the oil trade.

Curious as to what may have prompted this latest development in russian monetary policy. What is the motive behind this?

Banks have in the past refused to carry out transactions for russia. Perhaps this is intended to allow russia and its trading partners to cut bank middle men out of the equation?

Or perhaps there are other motives behind it.
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