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Just spotted something worth paying attention to in the Russia crypto space. XRP has quietly broken through the regulatory bar set in Moscow's upcoming digital assets bill, joining Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana in the approved tier.
Here's what's happening: Russia's new framework for digital currency is shaping up to be pretty selective. The Bank of Russia would get authority to greenlight which tokens can actually trade domestically. And they're not opening this up to everything—they're building a narrow channel for only the biggest, most liquid assets with serious trading track records.
XRP just cleared that threshold. With a market cap sitting around $81.67 billion right now, it's well above the bill's roughly $60 billion minimum. But size alone isn't enough. The framework also screens for average daily trading volume over two years (about $12 billion threshold) and proven market history. XRP checks those boxes too, which is why it's now part of the conversation alongside the major players.
What makes this interesting is the structure of Russia's approach. They're not trying to embrace the whole crypto market—they're being deliberate about which assets get access. That means retail investors would face annual purchase caps around $4,000, and privacy coins are likely getting blocked. It's monitored, controlled, and intentionally narrow.
For XRP specifically, this matters because the asset already has the scale to stay relevant as regulators define the legal market. Russian lawmakers are working toward a mid-year deadline, with parliamentary review expected by July. That timeline means we'll see clearer rules on which tokens actually make the final cut, licensing requirements, and how enforcement plays out.
Recently, XRP has been trading in a pretty tight range as market volatility compressed. Steady support around key levels kept things balanced, setting up potential for movement once the compression breaks. For now though, XRP's position above Russia's size threshold keeps it in the spotlight as one of the major assets in this emerging regulatory framework.