Phyrex|11月 26, 2025 16:57
I actually looked into this, and it turns out this is part of the EU's 19th round of sanctions against Russia and related entities and channels, set for 2025.
In this round of sanctions, the issuer of A7A5, A7 LLC, and its issuing entity in Kyrgyzstan, Old Vector LLC, have been added to the sanctions list. Payeer has also been identified as a high-risk service provider for helping Russia evade sanctions, launder money, and facilitate fund flows.
A7A5 is a stablecoin pegged to the Russian ruble, essentially functioning as Russia's fiat currency. Officially, it’s claimed that each A7A5 token is backed 1:1 by ruble deposits in Russia's state-owned bank, Promsvyazbank (PSB). Its nature is similar to USDC, except A7A5 is fully cash-backed, while USDC is primarily backed by debt instruments.
From the EU's perspective, the structure and function of A7A5 have become tools for Russia to bypass existing financial and sanction systems. As a result, they decided to include it in the sanctions list and ban all transactions related to it. (PSB itself is already on the U.S. OFAC SDN list.)
Although Payeer is nominally registered in Vanuatu, its operations, infrastructure, and customer base are heavily tied to Russia. Payeer has been accused of supporting payments, fund flows, and crypto services for several Russian crypto exchanges (like Garantex and Grinex) and other high-risk entities. Therefore, it has also been added to the sanctions list.
Essentially, this is similar to restricting Russia's fiat currency, the ruble. This marks the first time in history that the EU has directly sanctioned a stablecoin itself. While it feels somewhat related to the crypto space, it can still be seen as an extension of fiat currency.
PS: A7A5 is most active on TRON, with the vast majority of its supply (over 11 billion tokens, about 92% of the total supply) concentrated on the TRON network. A smaller portion is on Ethereum (around 1 billion tokens).
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