Share this article

Russian Finance Firms Form Blockchain Consortium

A group of Russian banks and financial services companies has formed a private-sector consortium focused on blockchain applications.

Updated Sep 11, 2021, 12:21 p.m. Published Jul 1, 2016, 3:47 p.m.
russia flag

A group of Russian banks and financial services companies has formed a private-sector consortium focused on blockchain applications.

Announced 1st July, the consortium includes payment processing firm QIWI, B&N Bank, Khanty-Mansiysk Otkritie Bank, Tinkoff Bank, MDM Bank, and professional services firm Accenture. The launch came during the 25th International Financial Congress in St. Petersburg, which was hosted by Russia’s central bank and held between 29th June and 1st July.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Areas of focus include the development of blockchain proofs-of-concept, work on joint research and policy outreach, and the creation of technology standards. The group said in public statements that it intends to take a proactive approach in working with domestic regulators and policymakers.

The move comes months after QIWI expressed its hope to create “Russia’s R3CEV”, a reference to the financial services consortium focused on blockchain and distributed ledger development that counts more than 40 institutions among its membership.

QIWI CEO Sergey Solonin said in a statement:

"I’m convinced that the Consortium, which brought together the Russia’s largest financial company, is able to become an effective platform for multilateral cooperation in exploration, launching innovations and their implementations in financial services."

Reports suggest that the central bank event revealed additional details about blockchain development in Russia.

According to ForkLog, Bank of Russia deputy chairwoman Olga Skorobogatova disclosed work on a blockchain-based “message transmission system” which is reportedly being tested in conjunction with outside parties.

“Our position is in applying the technologies where they may benefit the market, not just replacing one solution with another,” Skorobogatova was quoted as saying. “Currently we’ve developed a system for message transmission via blockchain. We’re testing it along with other market players.”

Image via Shutterstock

More For You

Crypto's latest selloff was a TradFi event, not a crypto crisis

(l-r) Fabio Frontini, CEO of Abraxis Capital Management, Emma Lovett, Markets DLT credit lead at JPMorgan, Thomas Restout, group CEO of B2C2, Omkar Godbole of CoinDesk: Consensus Hong Kong 2026 (CoinDesk)

Last week’s downturn was driven by yen carry trades and macro leverage, highlighting how deeply digital assets are now tied to traditional markets, panelists at Consensus Hong Kong 2026 said.

What to know:

  • Panelists said yen carry trade unwinds and rising margin requirements pressured crypto alongside gold and silver.
  • Despite volatility and outflows, roughly $100 billion remains in bitcoin ETFs.
  • A more permissive regulatory climate is pushing institutions toward public blockchains and stablecoin-based settlement.