monero rises after ban

Monero surged to an all-time high of $686 on Friday, defying Dubai’s recent ban on privacy tokens. The cryptocurrency jumped 14% in just 24 hours and climbed a whopping 45% over the past week, making Bitcoin and Ethereum look like slow-moving dinosaurs. Trading volumes exploded past $500 million as investors apparently decided privacy might actually be worth something. Go figure.

Privacy tokens soar as regulations backfire. Monero laughs all the way to $686 while regulators chase shadows.

The Dubai Financial Services Authority announced regulations prohibiting privacy tokens on regulated platforms in the Dubai International Financial Centre, effective January 12, 2026. Quite the date to remember. The ban covers everything – trading, promotion, fund activity, and derivatives involving privacy tokens. They’re particularly targeting coins using ring signatures and stealth addresses, with Monero and Zcash explicitly named as the troublemakers.

Dubai officials cited the usual suspects: money laundering risks and sanctions compliance issues. Privacy features make on-chain monitoring impossible, which doesn’t play nice with know-your-customer protocols. Can’t have people transacting without someone watching, apparently. Unlike collateral-backed stablecoins which maintain transparent reserves, privacy tokens operate with intentional opacity that regulators find problematic.

Ironically, Monero hit its peak on the very day the ban took effect. The market clearly has a sense of humor. Dubai isn’t alone in its crackdown – Japan and South Korea implemented similar restrictions earlier. This follows a global trend similar to the EU’s upcoming Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation which includes provisions against anonymous transfers, set to take effect in 2027. This positions Dubai among the most restrictive global frameworks while they simultaneously try to attract crypto businesses. Talk about mixed signals.

The entire privacy coin sector gained traction following the announcement. Market cap rose 3.5%, with trading volume jumping 30% daily. Dash surged over 55%, while Canton gained 4%. Even Zcash managed a 1% daily gain despite suffering a 22% weekly loss.

The new regulatory framework eliminates the prescribed list of recognized tokens in favor of firm-led suitability assessments. Residents can still hold privacy coins in private, non-custodial wallets – at least for now. Along with privacy coins, the DFSA has also completely banned privacy-enhancing tools like mixers and tumblers that could obscure transaction trails. The ban might aim for “regulatory clarity,” but it’s certainly sparked renewed investor interest in the very assets it’s targeting. Classic backfire.

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