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Most Influential: Oleg Ogienko

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Most Influential: Oleg Ogienko

Sanctions, capital controls and Russia’s improvised financial plumbing helped create A7A5, a ruble stablecoin built on a currency rarely used in global commerce, allowing it to appear legally at major events even as its presence leaves compliance teams panicked.

By Sam Reynolds|Edited by Cheyenne Ligon
Dec 16, 2025, 3:00 p.m.

Historically, there has been little international demand for Russia’s ruble. But a stablecoin pegged to the country's currency is having a moment – and becoming a prominent fixture at conferences outside the Western sphere of influence.

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Although Russia is one of the world’s largest energy exporters, accounting for over 10% of the global oil supply, most of that trade is settled in dollars, euros, or, increasingly, China’s renminbi. The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) does not list any ruble currency pairs among the major foreign exchange turnover, a reflection of how marginal the currency has become in global markets.

Yet in 2025, a ruble-backed stablecoin called A7A5 emerged as one of the most geopolitically-charged crypto projects of the year, a tool built not for global investors but for a sanctions-restricted economy searching for new financial plumbing.

The ruble’s strength this year has been one of the more counterintuitive market stories. Despite sanctions, weak growth, and falling oil prices, the currency has surged more than 40% against the dollar — making it the world's best-performing currency — driven almost entirely by policy engineering rather than fundamentals.

Russia’s central bank kept interest rates above 20%, imposed strict capital controls, and forced exporters to repatriate and convert foreign earnings, all of which boosted demand for rubles. At the same time, a collapse in imports reduced the need for foreign currency. The result is a tightly managed rally that looks powerful on paper but remains fragile underneath.

That engineered rally also explains why a ruble-pegged stablecoin suddenly becomes logical inside Russia’s distorted financial system.

With domestic FX markets shrinking, offshore settlement channels strained, and exporters required to recycle foreign earnings back into rubles, a blockchain-based ruble offers a parallel rail that can move value where banks no longer reliably can. A7A5 sits perfectly in that gap: it mirrors a currency propped up at home while providing a cross-border instrument that avoids the frictions, visibility, and sanctions risk of traditional banking.

When A7A5 sponsored Token2049 in Singapore, its presence exposed just how porous global sanctions regimes can be. The sponsorship was technically legal because Singapore’s restrictions bind only licensed financial institutions, and Token2049 is organized by a Hong Kong entity (China has no sanctions on Russia).

Even so, the optics caused alarm. Multiple companies told CoinDesk the situation was a compliance nightmare, and A7A5’s branding was quietly removed from the conference website, even as it continued to promote its role online.

But geopolitical discomfort has not slowed the project’s ambitions. Oleg Ogienko, the public face of A7A5, spoke at India Blockchain Week earlier this month.

India is a non-aligned country geopolitically and one of the largest buyers of Russian oil, making its presence both unsurprising and symbolically fitting for a stablecoin built to operate in the gray zones of global finance.

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