Moscow's winter mornings always arrive slowly.
The subway glides from gray residential districts into the city center. The advertising screens in the carriages routinely scroll through offers for ruble loans, online shopping promotions, and a banner that looks perfectly normal:
“Settling overseas income? USDT works too.”
It's hard to imagine that in a country besieged by the Western financial system, the term “stablecoin”—once found only in Silicon Valley whitepapers—has quietly become real infrastructure relied upon by ordinary people and businesses.
Alexei (pseudonym), 34, calls himself an “IT consultant,” but his real identity is a small node in a Moscow stablecoin black-market chain.
At nine in the morning, his work begins by checking Telegram channels.
There are four or five groups on his phone: “Moscow USDT Insider Rates,” “Freelancer Settlement Channels,” “Ruble Cash/Card Transfer · Acquaintances Only.”
Each group has bots posting quotes—“Buy USDT 76.3, Sell 77.1.” Deeper down are dozens of private chat windows: a young outsourcing developer needing to convert client dollars from a foreign card to USDT, then to rubles; a small company importing parts, needing to pay a Turkish supplier in USDT; also numbers with accents, saying only: “Large amount, meet offline.”
Alexei’s profit method is simple: he earns small spreads on minor transactions, or takes a few tenths of a percent as a “handling fee” on large orders, connected in the background to larger exchangers or exchanges.
On the surface, this all looks like mere “currency exchange,” but the funds quickly flow into deeper undercurrents.
Some deposit USDT into local exchanges with Russian-friendly interfaces, then convert it to Bitcoin and transfer it out; some use Russian platforms like Garantex to wash funds into offshore accounts; others use it to replenish liquidity for companies in Georgia or the UAE.
By evening, he divides the day's USDT earnings into two parts: one sold for rubles to pay the mortgage and buy groceries; the other sits quietly in a multi-signature wallet, a final insurance for his family should the situation change again.
On a statistical chart, he is just a tiny dot in “Russian retail crypto inflows.”
But the lines connecting all these dots form that invisible market.
I. After Being Cut Off, New Vessels Grow Underground
Russia's crypto story didn't begin after the sanctions.
By 2020, Eastern Europe was already one of the global regions with the “highest volume of crime-related crypto transactions.” Chainalysis research showed that darknets received a record $1.7 billion in cryptocurrency that year, most of which flowed to one name: Hydra. Hydra was the world's largest darknet market to date, accounting for 75% of global darknet market revenue at its peak.
Before it was shut down by German police in April 2022, it was effectively a vast “dark economy hub”—drugs, fake documents, money laundering services, biometric data; all “transactions unrecognized by the official world” were settled in stablecoins.
Hydra's downfall didn't destroy this chain; it just scattered the shadows: its users, infrastructure, and intermediary networks later reorganized among Garantex, Telegram OTC, and smaller exchanges.
The dark side of Russia's crypto economy didn't emerge after the sanctions; it has deep historical roots.
Since the full-scale escalation of sanctions following the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022, Russia has been层层围堵 (layer upon layer besieged) in the traditional financial world: foreign exchange reserves frozen, major banks excluded from SWIFT, Visa and Mastercard collectively withdrawing. For a country whose lifeblood is energy and commodity exports, this was almost like having its neck wrung.
But on-chain numbers tell another story:
According to Chainalysis statistics on European crypto activity from July 2024 to June 2025, Russia received $376.3 billion worth of crypto assets during this period, firmly ranking first in Europe, far surpassing the UK's $273.2 billion.
In Bitcoin mining, Russia is no longer an invisible player. The latest estimates from hashrate data platform Hashrate Index show that by the end of 2024, Russia accounted for approximately 16% of the global Bitcoin hashrate—second only to the United States.
These two numbers are cold and hard, but they suffice to show:
While the world tried to push Russia out of the traditional financial system, a new, underground crypto economy was rapidly growing.
If OTC vendors like Alexei are the capillaries, then local exchanges like Garantex are the heart of the black market.
Garantex was initially registered in Estonia, but its business focus has always been in Moscow. Starting in 2022, it was successively placed on sanctions lists by the U.S. Treasury and the EU, accused of facilitating ransomware, darknet transactions, and sanctioned banks.
In theory, such a platform should have been “dead” long ago. But in September 2025, a report disclosed by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) showed: despite multiple rounds of crackdowns, Garantex actually “continued operating in the shadows,” providing crypto exchange and transfer services for clients in Russia and surrounding regions through a series of offshore companies, mirror sites, and proxy accounts.
More strikingly, an in-depth report by on-chain analytics company TRM Labs pointed out: in 2025, Garantex and the Iranian exchange Nobitex together contributed over 85% of the crypto funds flowing into sanctioned entities and jurisdictions.
In March 2025, Tether froze USDT wallets related to Garantex, worth approximately $280,000 (about 2.5 billion rubles), forcing the exchange to announce a suspension of operations. But months later, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned a new name: Grinex—“a cryptocurrency exchange created by Garantex employees to assist it in evading sanctions.”
The black heart was punched, yet it started beating again in a new form.
II. A7A5: The Ambition and Paradox of “Putting the Ruble On-Chain”
USDT is the current protagonist of Russia's shadow economy, but in the eyes of Moscow officials, it also has a fatal flaw—it's too “American” and too “centralized.”
In 2025, a new pawn was quietly pushed onto the board: A7A5, a stablecoin issued by a Kyrgyz platform, claiming to be “pegged to the ruble.”
The British Financial Times disclosed in an investigation that A7A5 completed approximately $6-8 billion worth of transactions equivalent within four months, mostly occurring on weekdays and concentrated during Moscow trading hours, with the custodian bank being the sanctioned Russian defense bank Promsvyazbank.
EU and UK sanctions documents simply describe it as a “tool for Russia to evade sanctions.” By October 2025, the EU formally placed A7A5 on its sanctions list, and on-chain analysis companies also pointed out its tight coupling with Garantex and Grinex—becoming a new central node in Russia's crypto clearing network.
A7A5 plays a subtle role:
1. For Russian businesses, it is a “ruble stablecoin that can circumvent USDT risks”;
2. For regulators, it is an “invisible tool for putting the ruble on-chain while bypassing bank scrutiny.”
Behind this is an increasingly clear Russian idea: “Since we can't do without stablecoins, at least some should be printed by us.”
Yet the paradox is that any stablecoin wanting to go global must rely on infrastructure that Russia cannot control: public blockchains, cross-border nodes, overseas exchanges, third-country financial systems.
A7A5 wants to be a “sovereign stablecoin,” yet it has to circulate in a world Russia does not control. This is a microcosm of Russia's entire crypto strategy—it wants to break away from Western finance, yet it has to continue using the set of “on-chain financial building blocks” built by the West.
III. What Does Crypto Mean for Russia? Not the Future, but the Present
The Western world often sees crypto as an asset, a technology, or even a culture. But in Russia, it plays a completely different role:
1. For Businesses: Crypto is a Backup Channel for Trade Settlement
Russia imports high-tech components, drone parts, industrial instruments, even consumer goods—many cannot be paid for through traditional banking systems. Thus, a hidden but stable route has formed: Russian exports -> Middle East/Central Asian intermediaries -> USDT/USDC flow -> suppliers -> back to Moscow OTC -> converted to rubles.
It's not sophisticated, not romantic, not “decentralized,” but it works, it moves, it lives.
Crypto here is not a dream; it's the least efficient but only functional realism.
2. For the Youth, Crypto is an Escape Hatch from the National Currency
The Russian banking system has long suffered from a lack of trust, and the ruble's years of fragile performance have made crypto the most natural asset safe haven for the middle class and young engineers.
Ask any Moscow software engineer, and he might tell you not “I trade coins,” but “I convert my salary to USDT and keep it with a trusted OTC team on Telegram. Banks freeze cards, but the chain won't freeze me.”
This sentence is a microcosm of contemporary Russia.
3. For the State, Crypto and Mining are “Digital Energy Exports”
Russia has some of the world's cheapest electricity—Siberian hydropower and surplus natural gas power have made it a Bitcoin mining paradise.
Mining provides: an “export product” that bypasses the banking system, a globally exchangeable digital commodity, a way to evade financial blockades.
The Russian Ministry of Finance has officially acknowledged multiple times that “mining revenue is a necessary component of the national trade system.”
This is no longer a private activity but a quasi-state economic sector.
4. For the Gray System: Crypto is an Invisible Lubricant
This part is difficult to quantify, but existing facts include European intelligence agencies pointing to Russian intelligence using crypto to pay for information warfare and hacker operations, large-scale underground funds shuttling between Europe and Russia via stablecoins, and various smuggling networks highly reliant on on-chain funding rails.
Is Russia a “Crypto Power”? The Answer is More Complex Than It Seems
If you measure by technological innovation, no.
If you look at VC projects and DeFi, also no.
If you measure by mining industry, on-chain transaction volume, stablecoin inflow volume, and dependence on trade settlement, it is a crypto power center the world cannot ignore.
It didn't “choose to become” one; it was “pushed into becoming one by the world.”