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Russia’s A7 transborder payments company plans global expansion

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Russian international payments company A7 is planning a global expansion and is undeterred by Western sanctions, its CEO and part-owner, pro-Russian Moldovan ‌businessman Ilan Shor, told Reuters.

“As you can see, we are trying to work, and we are working.

That is, we have many sanctions imposed, but nevertheless, we continue to work because we must ensure, first and foremost, the freedom and ability for Russian businesses to move funds,” Shor said on the sidelines of Russia’s biggest economic reform in St. Petersburg.

“A7 plans to operate everywhere,” Shor said. Hit by Western financial sanctions over the war in Ukraine, Russia has been developing alternative payment systems with its main trading partners, such as China and India, using cryptocurrency, gold, and non-Western currencies.

A7, established in 2024 by the defence sector-focused bank PSB, has since ‌become the leader in Russia’s cross-border payments market. The company is under European Union and U.S. sanctions and does not disclose its operational methods.

The company, which kept a low profile during the early months of its existence, launched a massive advertising campaign across Russia with billboards promising money transfers to China within four hours.
A7 has a significant presence at this year’s economic forum in St.

Petersburg with a glitzy stand featuring a giant ‘matryoshka’ doll, a traditional Russian wooden doll with others of decreasing sizes placed one inside another.
“We believe that the illegally imposed sanctions will be lifted at some point, as we will overcome this,” Shor said.

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