Argentina’s central bank is reportedly drafting new rules that would let banks offer crypto services, marking a major reversal of its 2022 ban. The shift mirrors the U.S., where the SEC repealed SAB121 earlier this year, a move that triggered rapid institutional adoption.
If confirmed, this would be Argentina's own “SAB121 moment.”
In 2022, Argentina’s central bank (BCRA) introduced a strict rule called Communication A7506, which outright prohibited banks from offering or facilitating crypto services.
But the landscape changed after Javier Milei took office and appointed new leadership.
BCRA President Santiago Bausili has pushed for modernizing the financial system, arguing that banks and fintech should compete fairly and embrace new technology. BCRA is now preparing a regulation to ease restrictions and let banks re-enter the crypto market.
The situation strongly resembles the United States:
But Argentina’s old rule was even harsher, an outright ban rather than an accounting restriction.
Removing it would be a major green light for TradFi.
Globally, banks are already moving:
Argentina’s banks may follow the same path once restrictions are lifted.
A regulatory shift like this usually strengthens the crypto market. Here’s why:
When banks enter crypto, new users and capital follow.
This typically supports $Bitcoin, $Ethereum, and large-cap assets.
Argentina already has one of the highest crypto adoption rates due to inflation.
Allowing banks to participate could accelerate usage even more.
After months of regulatory battles worldwide, another country easing restrictions is a bullish signal.
Likely mild upward pressure on $BTC and altcoins due to improved sentiment.
If Argentina’s banks integrate trading and custody, expect a stronger adoption wave, potentially boosting market demand.


