- The Russian Central Bank has proposed launching digitized assets on public chains and has submitted the proposal to the government.
- The bank plans to launch digitized assets on public chains to attract international investments through blockchain and DeFi infrastructure.
- Russia has a pro-crypto policy, but it is highly regulated in favour of Bitcoin mining, which it uses to avoid sanctions on its economy. Using cryptocurrencies in everyday life is still highly restricted in the country, especially stablecoins, since most of them are US dollar-denominated.
- The country is very close to separately regulating stablecoins for international trade settlements, with a bill for the same expected to be made into a law around July 2026.
Russia Opens Up to Global DeFi Ecosystem
After years of combating US sanctions on its economy, Russia finally seems to be open to global finance, but this time via cryptocurrencies, blockchain, and DeFi. The Russian Central Bank, led by its chairperson Elvira Nabiullina, has submitted a draft proposal to the government, which seeks to launch digitized assets like RWA on public chains to attract investments.
In 2024, due to its conflict with Ukraine, Russia lost access to SWIFT, a network of global banks that allows banks to easily exchange local currencies with foreign currencies and vice versa. Since then, Russia has faced a shortage of US dollars for international payments, ultimately switching to Ruble-based trade and Bitcoin for settling these transactions.
However, that practice ran into limitations as Bitcoin was not designed for Forex transactions on a country-level scale.
Now, Russia seeks to digitize its assets through RWA markets, which necessitates connection with public blockchains like Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and others. This move is expected to bring much-needed global liquidity into Russian markets.
Russian Laws Becoming Pro-Stablecoin
Fearing a currency collapse, Russia took a series of steps to limit the use of cryptocurrencies by its citizens. However, the trade balance crisis has brought it closer to a pro-crypto law regime.
The country is very close to creating a separate set of laws to issue new stablecoins that will help it settle trade balances with other countries. A stablecoin policy is expected to be presented to the Duma (Russian federal legislature) in July 2026.
As of now, the Russian Central Bank has already started approving Ruble-pegged stablecoins.
Stablecoin-based Global Trade
Once highly critical of cryptocurrencies, the IMF had said in its earlier report that stablecoins might dominate global trade in the near future.
The same has been echoed by several industry professionals who believe it would take less than a decade for stablecoins to dominate the global payments landscape.
PayPal too has launched PayPal world, where users from nearly 70 countries can directly use PYUSD to transfer funds globally.
Disclaimer: BFM Times acts as a source of information for knowledge purposes and does not claim to be a financial advisor. Kindly consult your financial advisor before investing.