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Alfa-Bank Enters Crypto Custody Race as Russia’s Largest Private Bank Prepares for New Legislation

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While large U.S. banks are lobbying to water down a landmark crypto bill days before a Senate vote, Russia’s biggest private bank is racing into digital assets. Alfa-Bank announced plans to become a regulated digital asset custodian and offer crypto-related services to both retail and institutional clients, according to the original report from WuBlockchain. The move marks a sharp institutional turn at a moment when Russian authorities are rewriting the legal framework for crypto.

The bank intends to develop investment products built on public blockchains, aiming to attract international investors. The timing is no coincidence: the services will move forward only after Russia’s new cryptocurrency legislation takes effect. Details of that law remain closely watched by market participants inside and outside Russia, because it will define the boundaries for everything from custody and trading to taxation and cross-border flows.

The same report noted that two other major Russian lenders—state-backed Sberbank and T-Bank—have also announced plans to obtain digital custody licenses. That turns the quiet legislative process into a licensing race among the country’s most systemically important banks. The outcome will shape how easily Russian institutions can custody and move digital assets, and whether they can build credible onshore crypto infrastructure.

A Licensing Race Among Russian Banks

Alfa-Bank’s entry is significant because it is not a state-controlled entity like Sberbank. As Russia’s largest private bank, its move signals that crypto custody is not just a directive from the state but a commercial calculation. The bank sees enough demand from existing clients—and enough margin in custody fees and asset management products—to justify building the compliance infrastructure now, before the law is even finalized.

For Sberbank and T-Bank, the push is also about maintaining dominance over client assets in a financial system where capital controls and sanctions have made Western intermediaries unreliable. If Russian corporations and high-net-worth individuals want to hold digital assets in a regulated way at home, the first banks to hold custody licenses will capture that flow. Alfa-Bank’s announcement signals it does not plan to be left behind.

Yet the licensing is not yet granted. The timing hinges entirely on the new legislation. Legislative processes in Russia can move quickly when they align with state priorities, but they can also stall if the central bank, finance ministry, and security services disagree on risk. The mere fact that three of Russia’s largest banks are positioning themselves suggests that the law’s passage is now seen as a matter of when, not if.

This banking sector realignment echoes a broader global tug-of-war. While U.S. banks are fighting to weaken the biggest crypto bill in decades , Russian lenders are openly building custody capacity. The contrast is not lost on crypto market observers who track how regulatory divergence reshapes capital flows and exchange volumes across jurisdictions.

International Capital and the Public Blockchain Bet

Alfa-Bank specifically said it wants to develop investment products based on public blockchains to attract international investors. That phrasing is revealing. It is not building a permissioned bank-only ledger; it intends to use public rails like Ethereum or comparable networks. For a bank under Western sanctions scrutiny, that is a gamble—but it is also a clear signal that the bank sees demand for tokenized financial products that sit outside traditional payment corridors.

The bet on public blockchains places the bank squarely inside a trend that has accelerated in tokenization markets. Institutional tokenization volumes crossed $20 billion on-chain last quarter , driven by real-world asset issuances and settlement deals involving firms like JPMorgan. By offering regulated investment products on public networks, Alfa-Bank would open a door for international investors who cannot or will not interact with unregulated Russian crypto venues but might trust a regulated bank custodian.

Developer activity on major public chains remains concentrated, as data shows. Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Polygon continue to dominate blockchain developer activity , with Solana and Avalanche following closely. Any investment product built by Alfa-Bank would likely align with the networks that have the deepest liquidity and the most battle-tested infrastructure. That choice will influence which ecosystems benefit from Russian institutional flows once the legal doors open.

What the New Law Leaves Unanswered

Several unknowns hang over Alfa-Bank’s plan. The first is the exact scope of permissible crypto activities under the new Russian legislation. Will it allow full trading and exchange operations, or only limited custody and issuance? Russian regulators have historically wavered between tight control and cautious experimentation, with the central bank at times pushing for an outright ban. The final text of the law will determine whether Alfa-Bank’s ambitions can be realized fully or only partially.

The second uncertainty is sanctions compliance. International investors may still hesitate to engage with a Russian bank’s crypto products, regardless of regulatory approval within Russia. The U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control and the European Union have been explicit about the reach of sectoral sanctions, and they have increasingly targeted crypto channels used to bypass restrictions. Alfa-Bank will need to demonstrate that its custody and product structures can function without exposing counterparties to sanctions risk. That is a tall order.

A third question is technical infrastructure. Public blockchains are transparent, and on-chain surveillance firms now routinely associated addresses with sanctioned entities. Alfa-Bank’s product design must account for screening, reporting, and compliance at a scale that crypto-native firms have struggled to meet. The bank’s experience with traditional compliance does not automatically translate, and the timeline will be tight if the law moves quickly.

For the broader market, the Russian pivot toward regulated crypto custody is one more data point in a multi-jurisdiction shift away from the unhosted wallet model toward bank-intermediated digital asset services. When the largest private bank in a G20 economy decides to enter crypto custody, it stops being a fringe theory and starts looking like market infrastructure. Whether that infrastructure can operate across borders, however, depends on legal vectors that no bank can control on its own.

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