Kazakhstan’s central bank is setting aside up to $350 million from its reserves to build a crypto‑focused investment portfolio. The plan will not only buy coins directly but also back crypto‑linked stocks, funds, and infrastructure plays.
How the $350M Crypto Allocation Will Work
Central bank governor Timur Suleimenov said the National Bank of Kazakhstan has formed a portfolio of up to $350 million using its gold and foreign exchange reserves. The funds will go into “crypto assets,” which in this context include cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, as well as crypto‑related financial instruments.
Officials have stressed that the bank will not rush into a single big buy. Instead, the National Investment Corporation (NIC), the bank’s investment arm, will start deploying the money from April or May after it finishes choosing hedge funds, ETFs, and listed companies tied to the digital asset sector.
Deputy Governor Aliya Moldabekova said officials have already opened a dedicated account at the Central Depository. The account will hold the new crypto reserve for Kazakhstan’s central bank. As of February, Kazakhstan’s gold and FX reserves stood at about $69.4 billion. The planned crypto allocation represents roughly 0.5% of that total reserve pile.
Beyond Coins: What Assets the Central Bank Will Target
Reports from Reuters and local outlets say the portfolio will include several types of exposure. Alongside potential positions in Bitcoin and Ethereum, the central bank is considering high‑tech equities linked to blockchain and crypto infrastructure companies, as well as index‑style products that track digital asset markets.
Other parts of the country’s broader crypto-reserve strategy include investing in crypto‑focused hedge funds. Over time, officials also plan to take equity stakes in venture funds and listed firms in the sector. Authorities plan to fold in seized digital assets from criminal cases into the national crypto reserve structure. They will also add proceeds from state‑controlled mining operations, which Kazakhstan has used since its post‑China mining boom.
Officials describe the 350 million dollars as the first tranche of a national crypto reserve that could grow toward 1 billion dollars over the next few years. That longer‑term target would combine central bank reserves, seized coins, and mining revenue into a single coordinated structure at the NIC.
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