BTCC / BTCC Square / CryptopolitanES /
Vietnam impone norma de capital de $379M para nuevos exchanges de cripto bajo programa piloto

Vietnam impone norma de capital de $379M para nuevos exchanges de cripto bajo programa piloto

Published:
2025-09-09 15:29:02
17
3

Vietnam sets $379M capital rule for new crypto exchanges under pilot

El gobierno vietnamita acaba de elevar dramáticamente la apuesta para los exchanges de criptomonedas.

Nuevo estándar regulatorio: Requiere que todas las nuevas plataformas demuestren un capital mínimo de $379 millones para operar bajo el programa piloto del país—una de las barreras de entrada más altas a nivel global.

Filtración de jugadores: Esta medida elimina instantáneamente a operadores pequeños y medianos, consolidando el mercado en manos de instituciones con deep pockets—porque nada dice 'innovación financiera' como proteger el mercado de... demasiada competencia.

El mensaje es claro: Vietnam quiere cripto, pero solo el tipo que viene con balance corporativo y chequeras abultadas. Los traders locales pronto sabrán si el jugo vale la squeeze.

Government sets capital rules and foreign ownership limits

There’s a massive barrier to entry. Anyone looking to start an exchange in Vietnam must bring a minimum capital of 10 trillion dong, that’s around $379 million.

Out of that, at least 65% must come from institutional investors. Even with that much money on the line, foreign investors can’t take control. They’re capped at 49% ownership of any crypto trading business.

The government knows exactly what it’s walking into. Last year, Vietnam ranked fifth in the world in crypto adoption, based on data from Chainalysis. People aren’t waiting for permission. The market already holds over $100 billion in digital assets, according to Vietnam Investment Review. The state is just catching up.

To get things moving, Vietnamese crypto holders and foreign investors will be allowed to open new accounts under the legal framework. But there’s a deadline coming.

Six months after the first license is issued, all trades made by Vietnamese users on unlicensed exchanges will be considered illegal. The government hasn’t said what kind of penalties it will slap on rule breakers. But that clock will be ticking.

In June, Vietnam’s parliament passed a new law officially recognizing digital assets starting January 2026. This law marks a clean break from past policy, when the central bank and other state agencies kept warning people to stay far away from crypto.

The turnaround is clear. Officials now see blockchain, crypto, and digital infrastructure as one of eleven tech areas that could help push the country toward double-digit economic growth.

One deal is already in motion. Dunamu, the company behind Upbit, signed a memorandum of understanding with Vietnam’s Military Bank last month. The agreement will let the bank build a crypto exchange in Vietnam, using Upbit’s tech. That transfer is already underway.

Still, not everything is on the table. Bitcoin and other “virtual currencies” are not legal tender in Vietnam, and the government hasn’t announced any plans to change that. But officials are looking at a workaround.

The idea is to build sandbox mechanisms; special zones with looser regulations. These sandboxes are part of bigger plans to create international financial centers in Danang and Ho Chi Minh City. That means crypto could play a key role in Vietnam’s financial sector from the ground up.

KEY Difference Wire: the secret tool crypto projects use to get guaranteed media coverage

|Square

Descárguese la aplicación BTCC para empezar su trayectoria cripto

Empiece hoy mismo Escanéelo y únase a más de 100 millones de usuarios