Bolivia just did a u-turn on crypto

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Bolivia, a country that once slammed the door on cryptocurrencies, is now flipping the script big time.

After years of banning crypto use in its financial system, Bolivia’s Central Bank is cooking up its very own digital currency, the so-called “virtual boliviano.”

This isn’t some half-baked idea either. They’re aiming to roll it out on August 6-right on the nose of Bolivia’s 200th Independence Day.

CBDC

Edwin Rojas Ulo, the head honcho at Bolivia’s Central Bank, spilled the beans that they’re deep in the design phase, taking notes from other countries that have already dabbled in digital currencies.

The goal? To modernize payments and tackle cross-border transactions that usually get tangled up in U.S. dollars.

This move could seriously streamline how money moves in and out of Bolivia, especially since the country’s been struggling with foreign currency shortages and economic pressures.

Even Bolivia’s state energy giant, YPFB, is gearing up to use crypto for paying fuel imports, and experts say this is a sign that the government’s not just playing around anymore.

Regional changes

Now, don’t get me wrong, this is a big leap for Bolivia. Remember, back in 2014, they outright banned crypto, calling it risky and dangerous.

Fast forward to 2024, and they reversed course, allowing regulated crypto transactions and even seeing a doubling in digital asset trading. That’s some serious evolution, not gonna lie.

And they’re not alone at all. In Brazil, the financial industry is heating up too. The Brazilian Stock Exchange, B3, just got the green light from the securities regulator to launch futures contracts for Ethereum and Solana.

Starting June 16, investors can trade these futures, priced in U.S. dollars and benchmarked to Nasdaq indices. Ethereum contracts come in 0.25 ETH chunks, Solana in 5 SOL lots.

Bigger market

This is a big deal because it opens the door for institutions and smaller players to dip their toes into crypto derivatives without the well-known headache of handling the actual coins.

Plus, B3 is making Bitcoin futures more accessible by shrinking contract sizes to 0.01 BTC.

Marcos Skistymas from B3 called these products regulated and secure, wanting to bring more sophistication and options to the market.

Latin America’s crypto game is on fire. Bolivia’s adopting digital currency to modernize and dodge dollar dependency, while Brazil’s stock exchange is rolling out slick new crypto investment tools. What a time to be alive.


Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

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