Russia’s Quiet Stablecoin Surge Puts Fresh Pressure On U.S. Policies

Russia is quietly building a parallel crypto ecosystem just as U.S. policymakers remain stuck in gridlock.

Silver hand from the Defi sky giving a digital Rubel to Kremlin.
Created by Kornelija Poderskytė from DailyCoin

Crypto analyst and YouTuber Nick (NCash) argues the real regulatory race in digital assets is no longer theoretical — and Russia just signaled it intends to compete. In a recent video, he warns that while Washington bickers over bank protections and yield limits, Moscow is rolling out a framework that could harden its use of crypto in global trade.

Russia moves on retail and a ruble stablecoin you’ve barely heard of

The most concrete development: draft Russian legislation that would formally open crypto trading to everyday investors, with caps. Retail users could buy up to 300,000 rubles (about $3,800) in crypto per year, after passing a “risk test,” and only on licensed platforms in Moscow & St. Petersburg.

The move isn’t huge in size, but it’s strategic. Domestic payments must still be in rubles, while crypto is steered toward cross‑border use — a clear nod to sanctions pressure. If passed in the spring 2026 legislative session, enforcement could begin by July 2026, building on Russia’s 2024 legalization of mining and international crypto transactions.

Running in parallel is A7‑A5, a ruble‑denominated stablecoin that Nick says is now settling more than $1 billion per day. Virtually unknown outside Russia a year ago, its on‑chain supply reportedly grew by about $89.5 billion over 12 months, outpacing both USDT and USDC in growth, despite links to sanctioned entities and its role in cross‑border payments.

United States Gridlock’d: Bank Lobbying Amid Yield Fights

Nick contrasts this with the U.S., where stablecoin leadership is strong in dollar terms but policy momentum is fractured. He highlights Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s recent CNBC appearance after a key Senate crypto bill stalled at the “markup” stage.

Brian Armstrong’s core complaint: large banks are trying to “kill their competition” by limiting yield on stablecoins while continuing to pay around 0.14% on savings accounts. He points to roughly 3.8% rewards on some stablecoin products and calls for a “level playing field” rather than rules written around bank balance sheets.

Nick connects this to wider global moves. The U.K. is preparing a full legal framework for crypto and stablecoins this year. The EU’s MiCA regime is already live. China is pushing on settlement and yield products. In his view, the U.S. is risking its position as “crypto capital of the world” by moving slower and more defensively.

Strategic Implications Goes Beyond Retail Trading Caps

The video’s underlying claim is less about Russian retail access and more about rails and reserves. Russia and Iran, he notes, are “increasingly turning to crypto” to route around financial restrictions, with ruble stablecoins and capital controls helping the ruble gain over 40% against the dollar in the past year.

For investors, Nick frames this as a geopolitical layer to the stablecoin market. Non‑USD stablecoins — yen, U.K. pound, ruble — are coming or already scaling, and over time could chip away at U.S. dollar dominance in on‑chain payments and settlement, even if that erosion is gradual rather than sudden.

His takeaway: the “crypto race” now looks a lot like prior technological races. Nations are locking in standards and market share via regulation, licensing, and state‑aligned stablecoins. The question for the U.S. market isn’t just whether spot ETFs or new tokens get approved, but whether regulatory delays hand structural advantages to rivals willing to move faster.

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People Also Ask

Does the video claim Russia is ahead of the U.S. in crypto?

No. Nick says the U.S. still dominates stablecoins, but argues Russia is moving aggressively in specific areas like sanctions‑resistant rails and a domestic ruble stablecoin.

Is A7‑A5 verified by Western regulators or major analytics firms?

The video cites growth and daily volume figures but does not reference independent Western verification; the numbers should be treated cautiously.

Will U.S. stablecoin dominance disappear soon?

Nick does not think it will vanish quickly. His concern is longer‑term: competing sovereign stablecoins and clearer foreign rules could slowly dilute U.S. influence.

What policy change does he see as most urgent for the U.S.?

Passing clear stablecoin and crypto rules that don’t enshrine bank profits or suppress on‑chain yield, while allowing open competition between banks & crypto firms.





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