One of Russia’s largest banks is now offering tokens based on regular unleaded fuel, of the kind sold at gas stations across the country.
When the instrument matures, investors can either collect their money with accrued interest or receive a fuel card and use it to top up their tanks.
Russia’s Alfa-Bank issues digital financial asset on fuel
Alfa-Bank, Russia’s biggest private banking institution, has announced the launch of a digital financial asset (DFA) offering a choice between making a profit on the investment and receiving a physical product in return.
EuroTrans, a major Russian fuel operator that controls the Trassa network of gas stations, is the company behind the initiative, which utilizes the proprietary A-Token platform developed by Alfa-Bank.
The hybrid instrument certifies a monetary claim or the right to receive a specified amount of fuel, the business news outlet RBC noted in a report.
At maturity, between March 1 and 15 next year, holders will have to pick – either get the face value back, along with the due part of the 20% fixed annual yield, or be issued a fuel voucher for 100 liters of regular 95.
Investors will be able to compare the current price of the most common grade of gasoline with the other terms of the investment product and select the more favorable option. A press release explained:
“The digital financial assets for fuel combine the characteristics of a financial instrument and a real consumer asset. Investors have the opportunity to invest in a liquid and transparent protective asset, as well as the option to use the income to pay for fuel, which is a key expense.”
The nominal value of one token is 6,650 rubles (a little less than $85), equivalent to the fixed price of the fuel underpinning it.
The pilot issue is limited to 50 million rubles (almost $635,000) and is available at present only in the Russian capital and the adjacent Moscow Region.
The DFA can be purchased between December 23 and 26 by anyone who wants to invest in it, without restrictions, a spokesperson for Alfa-Bank emphasized.
According to the representative, the product is aimed at a broad audience and demonstrates the practical application of digital assets, including as a funding source and marketing tool, as is the case with Trassa’s token.
Alfa’s launch coincides with Russia’s push to legalize crypto investment
As defined by the law “On Digital Financial Assets” from 2021, Russian DFAs represent real assets tokenized using distributed ledger technology.
Unlike decentralized digital assets, they are based on private rather than public blockchains, differing from cryptocurrencies and digital tokens traded on crypto exchanges.
They are also currently issued only via platforms licensed by the Central Bank of Russia (CBR), such as A-Token, Atomize, Masterchain, and Sber, among others.
With the exception of an “experimental legal regime” providing limited investor access to crypto, the DFA law is the only Russian piece of legislation that partially regulates digital asset investment.
This is likely to change in the coming months, however. On Tuesday, the Bank of Russia released key points of a plan to legalize and comprehensively regulate all transactions involving digital coins and related products in 2026.
The monetary authority’s new regulatory concept recognizes cryptocurrencies and stablecoins as “currency assets” and aims to expand investor access to them, as reported by Cryptopolitan.
The new legal framework will also affect Russia’s market for digital financial assets, currently offering instruments such as tokenized securities and digital rights.
The central bank intends to allow Russian DFAs to circulate on open networks, too, with the aim of helping Russian companies attract foreign investment.
Alfa-Bank was among the financial institutions that launched DFAs based on major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) after the CBR authorized the offering of crypto derivatives in May.
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