Kazakhstan’s national crypto reserve will hold up to $1 billion in assets, including confiscated coins and shares of companies involved in the digital currency space.
The fund should be “up and running” by early next year at the latest, according to the head of the country’s central bank, who provided details on where the money will come from.
Kazakhstan is creating its own cryptocurrency reserve that will store between $500 million and $1 billion worth of various assets, not necessarily cryptocurrencies alone.
Part of these will be in the form of crypto seized by the government, and some will be repatriated assets, the governor of the nation’s monetary authority told Bloomberg.
Chairman of the National Bank of Kazakhstan (NBK) Timur Suleimenov explained the fund’s investments would include crypto ETFs (exchange-traded funds) and shares of firms dealing with digital coins.
The regulator will be “very careful about direct exposure to cryptocurrencies,” the governor remarked in an interview in London on Wednesday.
NBK’s top executive further noted that cash needed to fill up the crypto reserve will also come from funds earmarked for alternative investments, including confiscated assets. Then he broke the news:
“I think by year end, January next year we will have it up and running. Everybody’s good to go.”
Suleimenov arrived in the British capital to take part in the Kazakhstan Capital Markets Day 2025, which was hosted by the U.K. office of the U.S.-based business news agency.
The event was organized by the Kazakhstan Stock Exchange (KASE), together with the NBK and the country’s Agency for Regulation and Development of the Financial Market (ARDFM).
It was devoted to discussing the prospects for development of the financial sector as well as the strengthening of macroeconomic stability.
The sponsors put an emphasis on promoting the Central Asian nation’s potential as a global destination for investments, as detailed in a press release from the Kazakh embassy in London, quoted by the Russian business news portal RBC.
Suleimenov, who delivered the keynote speech, presented a macroeconomic overview of Kazakhstan, insisting that the country is open to innovation and new partnerships.
He highlighted the NBK’s role in conducting structural reforms, improving financial discipline, and implementing a progressive monetary policy.
The governor also touched on the introduction of the digital tenge, Kazakhstan’s central bank digital currency (CBDC), and other initiatives to foster fintech innovation, KASE noted in a separate announcement.
The financial authorities in Astana scrambled to create a national crypto reserve after President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev ordered the establishment of one in early September.
In an address to the nation, the Kazakh leader called for liberalizing the domestic crypto market and developing a full-fledged ecosystem, while urging:
“A state fund of digital assets should be created, which will accumulate a strategic crypto reserve from the most promising assets of the new digital financial system.”
Timur Suleimenov’s statement that the fund will also be filled up with confiscated funds makes sense, too. The interior ministry recently reported that it dealt with over 1,000 criminal cases involving cryptocurrencies in the past two years.
Their number has been growing alongside Kazakhstan’s prominence on the global crypto map. The country became a mining hotspot a few years ago, and its government eventually decided it wanted to make it a major Eurasian crypto hub.
This year alone, Kazakh authorities seized $10 million worth of cryptocurrency from a massive pyramid scheme, froze $9.7 million in Tether held by a crypto laundering platform on the dark web, and confiscated nearly $17 million in coins from some 130 busted illegal exchanges.
Earlier this week, Suleimenov’s deputy, Berik Sholpankulov, unveiled that the NBK may also convert money from the National Fund, which holds financial and other assets, as well as some of the country’s gold and forex reserves, into cryptocurrency.
It’s worth noting that Kazakhstan already has a cryptocurrency reserve. At the end of September, the Ministry of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Development announced the launch of the Alem Crypto Fund, backed by the local branch of Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange.
The department said its main purpose will be to serve as a vehicle for state-level savings and long-term investments in digital assets, as reported by Cryptopolitan. The fund’s first investment was a purchase of BNB tokens.
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