The post Brazil Central Bank Sets Crypto Rules, Sets up to $7M Capital Bar for Firms appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Brazil’s central bank issued its most sweeping crypto regulations to date, creating a formal licensing regime for service providers and classifying a broad range of crypto activities as subject to foreign exchange and capital market rules. The framework introduces three resolutions that define how crypto businesses must operate in South America’s largest economy, how much capital they must hold, and how international crypto transactions will be treated under law. The rules take effect Feb. 2 and existing companies have nine months from then to comply. The regime marks Banco Central do Brasil’s most comprehensive attempt yet to govern its fast-growing, but largely unregulated, crypto sector. While the central bank has floated various proposals since 2019, progress has been halting due to institutional friction and industry resistance. The challenge “was finding a way to unite innovation and security,” Gilneu Vivan, the bank’s director of regulation, said at a press conference, according to local news outlet Portal do Bitcoin. “The crypto market depends heavily on technology and has very important obligations related to anti-money laundering. All of this requires guarantees that it will be well executed.” Some of the banks’ regulations, including capital requirements and timescale came under attack from the crypto industry. Capital levels surprise Companies in the industry will need to hold a minimum of 10.8 million reais ($2 million) in capital, the bank said. Depending on the type of business, some companies will need to hold at least 37.2 million reais. That’s well above the 1 million-3 million reais proposed during the public consultation phase. Bernardo Srur, president of the Brazilian Association of Cryptoeconomy (ABCripto), called the framework “positive and necessary,” but criticized both the capital bar and the short window for achieving compliance which, he said, could deter competition. Firms that fail to meet the compliance deadline, which… The post Brazil Central Bank Sets Crypto Rules, Sets up to $7M Capital Bar for Firms appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Brazil’s central bank issued its most sweeping crypto regulations to date, creating a formal licensing regime for service providers and classifying a broad range of crypto activities as subject to foreign exchange and capital market rules. The framework introduces three resolutions that define how crypto businesses must operate in South America’s largest economy, how much capital they must hold, and how international crypto transactions will be treated under law. The rules take effect Feb. 2 and existing companies have nine months from then to comply. The regime marks Banco Central do Brasil’s most comprehensive attempt yet to govern its fast-growing, but largely unregulated, crypto sector. While the central bank has floated various proposals since 2019, progress has been halting due to institutional friction and industry resistance. The challenge “was finding a way to unite innovation and security,” Gilneu Vivan, the bank’s director of regulation, said at a press conference, according to local news outlet Portal do Bitcoin. “The crypto market depends heavily on technology and has very important obligations related to anti-money laundering. All of this requires guarantees that it will be well executed.” Some of the banks’ regulations, including capital requirements and timescale came under attack from the crypto industry. Capital levels surprise Companies in the industry will need to hold a minimum of 10.8 million reais ($2 million) in capital, the bank said. Depending on the type of business, some companies will need to hold at least 37.2 million reais. That’s well above the 1 million-3 million reais proposed during the public consultation phase. Bernardo Srur, president of the Brazilian Association of Cryptoeconomy (ABCripto), called the framework “positive and necessary,” but criticized both the capital bar and the short window for achieving compliance which, he said, could deter competition. Firms that fail to meet the compliance deadline, which…

Brazil Central Bank Sets Crypto Rules, Sets up to $7M Capital Bar for Firms

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

Brazil’s central bank issued its most sweeping crypto regulations to date, creating a formal licensing regime for service providers and classifying a broad range of crypto activities as subject to foreign exchange and capital market rules.

The framework introduces three resolutions that define how crypto businesses must operate in South America’s largest economy, how much capital they must hold, and how international crypto transactions will be treated under law. The rules take effect Feb. 2 and existing companies have nine months from then to comply.

The regime marks Banco Central do Brasil’s most comprehensive attempt yet to govern its fast-growing, but largely unregulated, crypto sector. While the central bank has floated various proposals since 2019, progress has been halting due to institutional friction and industry resistance.

The challenge “was finding a way to unite innovation and security,” Gilneu Vivan, the bank’s director of regulation, said at a press conference, according to local news outlet Portal do Bitcoin. “The crypto market depends heavily on technology and has very important obligations related to anti-money laundering. All of this requires guarantees that it will be well executed.”

Some of the banks’ regulations, including capital requirements and timescale came under attack from the crypto industry.

Capital levels surprise

Companies in the industry will need to hold a minimum of 10.8 million reais ($2 million) in capital, the bank said. Depending on the type of business, some companies will need to hold at least 37.2 million reais. That’s well above the 1 million-3 million reais proposed during the public consultation phase.

Bernardo Srur, president of the Brazilian Association of Cryptoeconomy (ABCripto), called the framework “positive and necessary,” but criticized both the capital bar and the short window for achieving compliance which, he said, could deter competition.

Firms that fail to meet the compliance deadline, which includes proving capital levels, cybersecurity controls, customer due diligence practices and risk assessments, will be barred from operating. Foreign companies active in the country must establish a local entity and transfer operations under that structure.

The rules establish a new type of business entity: Sociedades Prestadoras de Serviços de Ativos Virtuais (SPSAVs), or Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs), which must now be licensed by the central bank and are divided into three categories based on the services they offer: intermediaries, custodians and brokerages.

FX controls hit self-custody wallets

The framework also brings several types of crypto transactions, including those involving stablecoins, within Brazil’s foreign exchange and cross-border capital controls regime. These include international payments with cryptocurrencies, transfers to and from self-custody wallets and crypto-to-fiat transactions.

Firms authorized to operate in Brazil’s FX markets, including VASPs, may conduct these transactions, but with restrictions that include a cap of $100,000 per transaction. Starting May 4, they will have to report these transactions monthly to the central bank with details including client details, asset types, amounts in reais and links between counterparties.

VASPs are also barred from handling physical currency (domestic or foreign) and from using foreign cash in crypto purchases.

The goal, officials say, is to reduce regulatory arbitrage and bring transparency to crypto’s role in Brazil’s balance of payments and economic statistics.

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2025/11/11/brazil-s-central-bank-sets-crypto-rules-establishes-up-to-usd7m-capital-bar-for-firms

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Neom terminates $1bn tunnel contract at heart of The Line

Neom terminates $1bn tunnel contract at heart of The Line

Saudi Arabia’s Neom has cancelled a roughly $1 billion tunnelling contract at the heart of its flagship “The Line” giga-project, according to public documents.
Share
Agbi2026/03/18 11:28
Gold continues to hit new highs. How to invest in gold in the crypto market?

Gold continues to hit new highs. How to invest in gold in the crypto market?

As Bitcoin encounters a "value winter", real-world gold is recasting the iron curtain of value on the blockchain.
Share
PANews2025/04/14 17:12
These Are The XRP Price Targets You Need To Know Now: Cubic Analytics Founder

These Are The XRP Price Targets You Need To Know Now: Cubic Analytics Founder

Cubic Analytics founder Caleb Franzen says XRP is entering a decisive phase after months of compression, with the price structure implying a path toward the $6–$11 zone so long as the market defends what he calls the key risk line at $2.68. XRP Price Targets In a wide-ranging discussion on the Thinking Crypto podcast with host Tony Edward, Franzen stressed that his conclusions are grounded in “price, structure, and statistical signals” rather than narrative. “It’s the chart itself. It’s the structure itself,” he said. “So long as we stay above $2.68, we’re going much higher.” Franzen’s XRP view comes out of the same template he applies across digital assets: identify trend integrity, map the impulse-consolidation rhythm, and translate it into a ladder of Fibonacci extension targets on a logarithmic scale. In XRP’s case, he argues the market traced higher highs and then “tightened up” into a controlled series of lower highs—what he calls a classic volatility coil that “allows price to reset… for the next leg higher.” Related Reading: Social Media Turns Bearish On XRP: Is This A Buy Signal? He then anchors objective targets to that structure: using the most recent consolidation leg, he cites the 161.8% extension near roughly $4.40 and the 261.8% extension around $6. From the larger Q1 swing—Q1 highs to Q1 lows—he adds a second band of objectives at approximately $5.40 and $11.55. The message, in his words: “Those are the price targets that you have to be aware of if you’re holding and investing in XRP… so long as we stay above $2.68.” Risk management is central to how Franzen frames the trade. Rather than a maximalist forecast, he sets a clear invalidation level and treats it as a mechanical decision point. “If we fall below $2.68, you can get stopped out. You can reduce some of your exposure. You can slow down your DCA,” he said. “It’s okay to be wrong. It’s just not okay to stay wrong.” The Macro Angle Although the podcast also covered Bitcoin, Ethereum and Solana, Franzen’s macro and cross-asset framework is meant to contextualize, not overshadow, the XRP setup. He repeatedly described himself as “time agnostic,” declining to pin outcomes to a specific month or quarter and insisting that the tape, not the calendar, dictates probability. “I’ve been sharing [cycle] targets since the middle of 2023,” he noted, adding that the prudent path is to keep raising targets within an uptrend while letting invalidation handle the rest. That stance is informed by what he characterizes as resilient, supportive macro conditions—good enough for risk assets to trend without demanding a weak US dollar as a crutch. He pointed to strong real activity data and improving earnings assumptions as evidence that risk appetite is not being forced; it’s developing naturally. Related Reading: XRP Ready For $9 Blast — ‘Break $3.10 And It’s Game Over,’ Says Analyst Among the specific markers he flagged: Q2 real GDP growth at 3.8% with expectations of roughly 3.9% for Q3; prime-age unemployment near historic lows at about 3.8%; labor force participation rising; and both real and nominal wage growth, with wages around 4.1% year over year. In credit, he underscored tight spreads and high-yield corporates printing multi-year highs—“and if we adjust them for the dividend yield, they’re trading at all-time highs”—a combination that, in his experience, does not occur when markets are bracing for imminent stress. “As we’re looking at the weight of the evidence here, everything is coming together,” he said. “Higher highs and higher lows, increasing risk appetite, decent macro conditions, the Fed is cutting interest rates… We have to continue to have an upward bias.” That macro lens matters for XRP, he argues, because it reinforces the primacy of structure over story. He criticized a common assumption that crypto rallies must coincide with a falling dollar, highlighting that the US Dollar Index (DXY) has been roughly flat since mid-April while Bitcoin—and, by extension, broader crypto beta—advanced materially. He also described a composite lens that prices Bitcoin against a basket of global currencies (effectively offsetting BTC/USD by DXY) and said that index is making fresh all-time highs too, reflecting “weak global fiat currencies, not necessarily just a weak dollar.” The implication for XRP: if the broader liquidity and risk backdrop continues to reward trend persistence, then the technical coil and extension ladder have a cleaner runway. At press time, XRP traded at $2.8593. Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
Share
NewsBTC2025/10/08 21:30