Putin's Bold Bitcoin Prediction
Russian President Vladimir Putin made a striking claim at a Moscow investment conference on December 4, 2024: nobody can ban Bitcoin (BTC). The statement came during a broader discussion about the dollar's weakening grip on global commerce, with Putin arguing that alternative financial instruments would inevitably fill the void.
"For instance — Bitcoin. Who can prohibit its use? No one," Putin declared. "Or the use of other electronic ways of settlement. No one can ban the use of them."
He added that these new instruments would "continue developing" no matter what fate awaits the dollar. Many observers interpreted this as a direct message to Western powers about the limits of their sanction regimes.
From Talk to Action: Crypto Goes Mainstream in Russian Trade
Putin's words weren't just philosophical musing. Shortly after that conference, Russia's Finance Minister Anton Siluanov confirmed that Russian companies had begun using Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies for cross-border transactions. The move was explicitly framed as a workaround for trade disruptions caused by sanctions imposed following the Ukraine war.
Siluanov noted that Bitcoin mined domestically in Russia could be deployed in foreign trade operations. This wasn't a theoretical possibility anymore — it was happening.
The groundwork had been laid earlier in the year when Putin greenlit Bitcoin mining operations across the country. Interestingly, Putin had previously rejected the central bank's 2022 proposal to ban cryptocurrencies entirely, arguing that Russia possessed "competitive advantages" in mining thanks to its cheap energy resources and cold climate.
The Central Bank's Cautious Expansion
Following Putin's directives, the Bank of Russia proposed a measured approach in March of this year. The plan would allow a limited number of "highly qualified" Russian investors to buy and sell cryptocurrencies under a new three-year experimental legal framework.
The central bank remained skeptical about cryptocurrency as a payment method and proposed banning all crypto transactions between Russian residents outside the experimental regime. But that hardline stance appears to be softening.
Bank of Russia First Deputy Governor Vladimir Chistyukhin recently suggested that the rules should be relaxed beyond the "extremely narrow" category of qualified investors, given the sanctions pressure Russia faces. It's a pragmatic shift — when you're cut off from traditional financial systems, crypto starts looking a lot more useful.
The Scale of Russia's Mining Operations
Just how significant is Russia's crypto mining industry? Maxim Oreshkin, the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Presidential Executive Office, said earlier this week that cryptocurrency mining generates "enormous sums" that must be factored into Russia's balance of payments, according to Vedomosti, the country's leading business newspaper.
While there's no official public figure for how much Bitcoin the Russian government holds, calculations from Russia's National Cryptomining Association showed that 54,000 BTC were mined in 2023 alone. At current prices, that's substantial economic activity.
Price Action: At the time of writing, BTC was trading at $91,968.59, up 1.35% in the last 24 hours.