A7A5, a ruble-backed stablecoin, processed more than $100B on-chain in less than a year before facing multiple sanctions and blocklists.
The token was launched in January 2025 by A7 LLC, operates on Ethereum and TRON, and functions as a bridge between rubles and USDT.
After U.S. and EU sanctions, daily volume fell from over $1.5B to around $500M; roughly 42.5B tokens are now in circulation, valued at about $547M.
A7A5, a ruble-backed stablecoin linked to Russian financial networks, processed more than $100B in on-chain transactions in less than a year before international sanctions curtailed its operations. The figure comes from reports published by blockchain analytics firm Elliptic and is based on the aggregate value of all transfers recorded on public blockchains.
The stablecoin was launched in January 2025 by A7 LLC, a Russian company focused on cross-border payment services for businesses affected by Western financial restrictions. Major shareholders include Ilan Shor and the Russian state-owned bank Promsvyazbank (PSB), both under sanctions. The token is formally issued through Old Vector LLC, a Kyrgyzstan-registered entity, with a stated 1:1 backing in ruble deposits held at PSB.
A7A5 operates on Ethereum and TRON. Elliptic identified roughly 250,000 transactions originating from more than 41,300 distinct addresses. At present, around 35,500 accounts hold balances of the token. The cumulative volume reflects repeated transfers and on-chain fee payments, without distinguishing net economic activity.
A7A5’s primary use centered on its role as a bridging asset between rubles and USDT. This structure allowed value to flow into dollar-denominated markets without maintaining prolonged exposure to USDT-linked wallets, which are vulnerable to freezes by Western authorities.
Activity concentrated on specific infrastructure. The centralized exchanges Grinex and Meer, both based in Kyrgyzstan, along with a project-linked DEX, absorbed most of the flow. In July 2025, the issuer injected up to $150M per day in USDTliquidity into the DEX. By November, that figure had fallen to about $0.5M per week.
Growth slowed from mid-2025 onward. No significant issuances have been recorded since late July. Daily volume dropped from peaks above $1.5B to levels near $500M. In August, the United States sanctioned A7A5; in October, the European Union enacted similar measures. In November, Uniswap added the token to its blocklist.
Several users reported USDT deposit freezes when on-chain traces linked those funds to A7A5. At the same time, the project rolled out additional services such as PSB card purchases, Stablepay, and token-backed digital promissory notes. Card-based purchases totaled $26M. Digital promissory notes recorded 2,300 redemptions worth $8.6M.
Around 42.5B A7A5 tokens are currently in circulation, with an approximate value of $547M. The stablecoin continues to operate under an increasingly restrictive regulatory and compliance environment
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Elliptic: A7A5 Stablecoin Moved $100B Prior to Sanctions Targeting Russia‑Tied Network - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
A7A5, a ruble-backed stablecoin linked to Russian financial networks, processed more than $100B in on-chain transactions in less than a year before international sanctions curtailed its operations. The figure comes from reports published by blockchain analytics firm Elliptic and is based on the aggregate value of all transfers recorded on public blockchains.
The stablecoin was launched in January 2025 by A7 LLC, a Russian company focused on cross-border payment services for businesses affected by Western financial restrictions. Major shareholders include Ilan Shor and the Russian state-owned bank Promsvyazbank (PSB), both under sanctions. The token is formally issued through Old Vector LLC, a Kyrgyzstan-registered entity, with a stated 1:1 backing in ruble deposits held at PSB.

A Bridge Between Rubles and USDT
A7A5 operates on Ethereum and TRON. Elliptic identified roughly 250,000 transactions originating from more than 41,300 distinct addresses. At present, around 35,500 accounts hold balances of the token. The cumulative volume reflects repeated transfers and on-chain fee payments, without distinguishing net economic activity.
A7A5’s primary use centered on its role as a bridging asset between rubles and USDT. This structure allowed value to flow into dollar-denominated markets without maintaining prolonged exposure to USDT-linked wallets, which are vulnerable to freezes by Western authorities.
Activity concentrated on specific infrastructure. The centralized exchanges Grinex and Meer, both based in Kyrgyzstan, along with a project-linked DEX, absorbed most of the flow. In July 2025, the issuer injected up to $150M per day in USDT liquidity into the DEX. By November, that figure had fallen to about $0.5M per week.

A7A5 Volume Collapsed After Multiple Sanctions
Growth slowed from mid-2025 onward. No significant issuances have been recorded since late July. Daily volume dropped from peaks above $1.5B to levels near $500M. In August, the United States sanctioned A7A5; in October, the European Union enacted similar measures. In November, Uniswap added the token to its blocklist.
Several users reported USDT deposit freezes when on-chain traces linked those funds to A7A5. At the same time, the project rolled out additional services such as PSB card purchases, Stablepay, and token-backed digital promissory notes. Card-based purchases totaled $26M. Digital promissory notes recorded 2,300 redemptions worth $8.6M.
Around 42.5B A7A5 tokens are currently in circulation, with an approximate value of $547M. The stablecoin continues to operate under an increasingly restrictive regulatory and compliance environment