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A7A5 under fire as EU weighs sanctions on ruble-pegged stablecoin


The European Union is reportedly considering sanctions against A7A5, a Russian ruble-backed stablecoin and the world’s largest non-US-dollar pegged stablecoin.

The sanctions would prohibit EU-based organizations and individuals from engaging directly or indirectly through third parties with the token, according to a report from Bloomberg on Monday, citing documents related to the proposal.

Several banks in Russia, Belarus and Central Asia are in the firing line too, accused of enabling sanctioned entities to conduct crypto-related transactions, Bloomberg reports.

It is the latest effort by the EU to hobble Russian-tied crypto movements, following Sept. 19 sanctions on crypto platforms that blocked all transactions for Russian residents and restricted dealings with foreign banks tied to the country’s sector.

Cryptocurrency is just one of the many methods Russia has used to attempt to evade Western sanctions.

Russia has also been using a so-called shadow fleet, hundreds of vessels used to smuggle sanctioned goods, concealing the origins of its oil and conducting intermediary trading through other countries, along with a variety of different methods, according to global risk consultancy firm, Integrity Risk International.

At the same time, it’s using illicit gold trades to launder money, global policy think tank Rand said in a December 2024 report.

A7A5’s market cap spiked after sanctions

A week after the EU’s sanctions against crypto platforms were announced on Sept. 19, A7A5’s market capitalization spiked on Sept. 26 from around $140 million to over $491 million, a 250% jump in one day, according to CoinMarketCap.

A7A5’s market capitalization surged 250% a week after the EU first imposed sanctions. Source: CoinMarketCap

A7A5’s market capitalization is now holding steady at around $500 million as of Monday, which is roughly 43% of the total $1.2 billion market cap of non-US dollar stablecoins. Circle’s euro-pegged EURC is the second-largest, with a market capitalization of around $255 million.

EU sanctions require the backing of all 27 member states before they receive approval, and they could still be amended or changed before being implemented, according to Bloomberg.