
How Russian banks adapted to sanctions
Hello! This week we detail our investigation into how Russian banks are skirting sanctions to transfer money to the EU — the latest in a string of restriction-busting innovations rolled out by the sector amid the Ukraine invasion.
The Central Asian fix: Sending rubles to Europe
Sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine hit the banking sector hard. Tens of millions of people lost access to everyday services and it became much more difficult to send money abroad. This forced Russian banks to adapt, fast — something they managed to do better than anybody predicted. As The Bell discovered, one leading Russian bank has even set up a way to send money to Europe completely bypassing the SWIFT financial messaging system.
Sanctions innovation
Russian banks have faced a huge number of sanctions and restrictions since February 2022. The most immediate and visible hit came to card payment systems. Russian cards were cut off from the Visa and Mastercard systems abroad and when buying foreign goods and services online. Contactless payment systems like Apple Pay also stopped working, while bank’s apps on App Store and Google Play were removed.
This article is available exclusively to subscribers of THE BELL. PRO
Subscribe to THE BELL. PRO, your one-stop shop for understanding the Russian economy and politics written by award-winning experts
Subscribe-
Unlimited access to an archive of over 300 articles, with 20 more articles added each month
-
Two in-depth weekly newsletters looking at recent events
-
Join The Bell’s editors and authors for webinars on the Russian economy and Russian politics
Already have an account? Log in


