The ban attempts to stymie capital flight from the country that could be attributed to the effects of its depreciating national currency, the rial. That's according to Fatemeh Fannizadeh, Swiss qualified independent practitioner and attorney at law, who spoke on the matter via Twitter on Friday.
Iran has already banned the use of cryptocurrency for payments, while the country’s financial institutions are free to use cryptocurrency, derived from sanctioned miners, to pay for imports.
How exactly the central bank intends to regulate the inflow of fungible cryptocurrency from outside the country's borders remains unclear.
CoinDesk attempted to contact the CBI but did not receive a reply by press time.