rublecoin bitcoin

Add your comment to this page This Bitcoin and Russian Ruble convertor is up to date with exchange rates from June 24, 2017.Enter the amount to be converted in the box to the left of Bitcoin.Use "Swap currencies" to make Russian Ruble the default currency.Click on Russian Rubles or Bitcoins to convert between that currency and all other currencies.Bitcoin (BTC) Russian Ruble (RUB) Other countries and currencies The Bitcoin is the currency in no countries.The Russian Ruble is the currency in Russian Federation (RU, RUS, Russia).The Russian Ruble is also known as the Russian Rouble.The symbol for BTC can be written BTC.The symbol for RUB can be written R.The Russian Ruble is divided into 100 kopecks.The exchange rate for the Russian Ruble was last updated on June 23, 2017 from The International Monetary Fund.The BTC conversion factor has 6 significant digits.The RUB conversion factor has 6 significant digits.BTC RUB 0.0002 32.82 0.0005 82.05 0.0010 164.10 0.0020 328.20 0.0050 820.50 0.0100 1640.99 0.0200 3281.99 0.0500 8204.96 0.1000 16,409.93 0.2000 32,819.85 0.5000 82,049.63 1.0000 164,099.25 2.0000 328,198.50 5.0000 820,496.26 10.0000 1,640,992.51 20.0000 3,281,985.02 50.0000 8,204,962.55 BTC rate June 24, 2017 RUB BTC 50.00 0.0003 100.00 0.0006 200.00 0.0012 500.00 0.0030 1000.00 0.0061 2000.00 0.0122 5000.00 0.0305 10,000.00 0.0609 20,000.00 0.1219 50,000.00 0.3047 100,000.00 0.6094 200,000.00 1.2188 500,000.00 3.0469 1,000,000.00 6.0939 2,000,000.00 12.1877 5,000,000.00 30.4694 10,000,000.00 60.9387 RUB rate June 23, 2017 Print the charts and take them with you in your purse or wallet while you are traveling.
Leave a Comment Comment title: Your comment: Your name (To be displayed with your comment): Options Round to smallest currency unit.Popular Conversions Starting CurrencyTransaction volumes between the ruble and digital currency bitcoin enjoyed their biggest day of the year on Tuesday as the Russian central bank failed to halt the ruble's tumble.The ruble plunged more than 11 percent against the greenback Tuesday — its steepest intraday fall since 1998 — as traders dumped a currency that has crumbled on the back of weaker oil prices and sanctions against Russia by the West.Volatile trading continued on Wednesday, with the currency gaining over 10 percent against the dollar, although it remains down 13 percent on the week.Other than the dollar, the beneficiaries of this flight from Russia appeared to be the euro, the yen, sterling -- and bitcoin., which tracks financial and technical statistics for bitcoin, shows that transaction volumes with the ruble spiked on Tuesday spiked to 819 from an average of 230 trades for the last 30-day period.
This was close to a 250 percent increase in transactions and was the highest volume seen since December 2013, according to the website."The news coming out of Russia is indeed unparalleled," Bobby Lee, the co-founder and CEO of prominent Chinese bitcoin exchange BTC China, told CNBC via email.bitcoin cotação realRead MoreRussia starts selling its foreign currency stock "The high trading volumes with the ruble is to be expected, given the flight away from this struggling currency.bitcoin casino no minimum depositBitcoin is therefore a natural destination, as well as other strong central bank currencies."bitcoin nguyen hoang huyStart of a Russian shift to cryptocurrency?yung bitcoin
A cryptocurrency exchange based in Bulgaria, called BTC-e, is known in the industry as being the most Russian-friendly despite bitcoin being made illegal in Russia.The exchange allows users to trade in rubles and its website can be displayed in the Russian language alongside Chinese and English.gudagnare bitcoin shows that the exchange has seen a modest spike in ruble transactions in recent weeks.ethereum pound priceThe flow into bitcoin echoes a similar move seen in Cyprus in April 2013 when capital controls were placed on citizens who tried to take large sums of money out of the embattled euro zone nation.The restrictions were seen as one of the key factors behind a rally in the price of bitcoin as Cypriot investors tried to shift money beyond its borders.Read MoreRussia's ruble rout: Why it shouldn't surprise you Looking at Tuesday's data points, Akif Khan, the vice-president of solutions strategy at bitcoin payments company Bitnet, said that the rise could be correlated with the broader news about trouble in Russia's economy and impending tighter controls, but conceded that there was no way of confirming the trend.
"I'd be surprised if Russians were turning to bitcoin in any meaningful way given the uncertainty over whether they could use it or store it without penalties in the future," he told CNBC via email.Analysts have told CNBC that capital controls could be used by the Russian government to try to stem the fall in the ruble but the Russia has refrained on such policy.In the meantime, the Russian finance ministry has announced that it has started selling its foreign exchange reserves in an effort to bring back some sort of equilibrium.Read MoreEurope's banking bosses dismiss Russia contagion Flocking to London housing market Aside from currencies, it appears that Russians have shown an interest in the London property market, which is increasingly being seen as a haven for foreign investors.Ultra-rich Russians now buy one in five of London's £10 million-plus properties, according to research by estate agent Knight Frank.The company told CNBC that its web traffic shows the number of Russians looking at London property was 13 percent higher in November 2014 than the same month last year.