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Iran Conflict 2026
5JUN

Treasury freezes Iran's four crypto exchanges

4 min read
08:43UTC

OFAC designated Nobitex and three more Iranian exchanges on 2 June, cutting off the stablecoin route the Central Bank used to defend the rial and the IRGC used to bank Hormuz tolls.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Treasury froze the crypto exchanges that funded both Iran's rial defence and the IRGC's Hormuz tolls.

The US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, OFAC, designated Nobitex on 2 June under two authorities at once: Executive Order 13224, the counterterrorism order, and Executive Order 13902, which covers Iran's financial sector 1. Nobitex is Iran's largest cryptocurrency exchange, handling more than half of all Iranian digital-asset inflows in 2025. Treasury named three more exchanges beside it: Wallex at 12 per cent of inflows, Bitpin at 10 per cent, and Ramzinex, through which $2.45 billion had passed. Four of Iran's busiest exchanges lost dollar access on a single day.

Four individuals went on the list under the counterterrorism order, including Nobitex chairman Amir Hossein Rad and two members of the Kharrazi family, who sit inside Mojtaba Khamenei's inner circle. Treasury says it has now frozen close to $500 million in regime-linked crypto under its Economic Fury campaign, the same thread that began with the PGSA designation on 28 May . The State Department added a $15 million bounty through Rewards for Justice for information disrupting IRGC financial mechanisms 2.

Follow the plumbing. Nobitex was the rail the Central Bank of Iran used to reach dollar stablecoins and slow the rial's fall, and the IRGC (Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) levied its Hormuz tanker tolls in those same stablecoins . The same designation that drains the currency defence also drains the toll machine, because both flows passed through the named exchanges. Defenders call it the cleanest pressure available short of force. Critics note that crypto rails reroute fast, and an exchange can spin up fresh wallets in a weekend, so the freeze's bite depends on whether foreign counterparties actually refuse the named wallets.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has been cut off from the normal global banking system for years because of US sanctions. To get around this, Iranians started using cryptocurrency, especially a type called USDT (a 'stablecoin' pegged to the dollar), traded through local crypto exchanges. The four exchanges named here (Nobitex, Wallex, Bitpin and Ramzinex) together handled most of this traffic. The US Treasury on 2 June put all four on its sanctions list, which means any company worldwide that does business with them risks being cut off from the US financial system. This matters in two ways: the Iranian government was using these exchanges to buy dollars and prop up its own currency, and Iran's Revolutionary Guard (the IRGC) was using them to collect toll payments from ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The IRGC's Hormuz toll machinery from the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) required a payment channel that was denominated in dollar stablecoins, accepted pseudonymously, and settled outside the US correspondent banking system.

Nobitex met all three conditions simultaneously. The CBI independently needed Nobitex for the same reason: its own SDN-list status since 2019 blocked it from the dollar market, and the 43% rial devaluation through May 2026 created urgent demand for dollar-liquidity tools.

The second structural cause is that Iran's domestic banking system has no capacity to absorb the exchange rate pressure: with inflation running above 40% and the rial at a record low on 1 June, the stablecoin rail was the CBI's only lever for open-market intervention. Designating Nobitex simultaneously removed the IRGC toll revenue channel and the CBI stabilisation tool, hitting two distinct institutional functions with one instrument.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Nobitex and the three co-designated exchanges will attempt address migration within days; OFAC will need to post successor-wallet updates to maintain the designation's operational effect.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    The CBI loses its open-market dollar-intervention tool just as diplomatic momentum re-emerges, increasing the probability that a future rial slide will be sharper and faster than the 43% six-month slide already documented.

    Short term · Reported
  • Precedent

    Designating a state's central bank satellite exchange sets a template for targeting any country using crypto rails to evade sanctions, with implications for Venezuela, North Korea and Russia's evolving stablecoin infrastructure.

    Long term · Reported
First Reported In

Update #116 · Washington signs a sanction, not a strike

PBS NewsHour· 3 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
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Hezbollah / Lebanon
Hezbollah / Lebanon
Naim Qassem rejected the Washington Lebanon framework on 4 June as "absurd, humiliating and insulting", blocking a ceasefire instrument that required Hezbollah to withdraw north of the Litani before any Israeli withdrawal. Over one million Lebanese remain displaced; the framework's collapse prolongs that toll.
Iran
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Foreign Minister Araghchi publicly coupled the Lebanon ceasefire to the Iran-US nuclear track on 4 June, carrying IRGC authority rather than his own civilian mandate. The IRGC delegation has sent no HEU counter-proposal since Araghchi confirmed no progress that same day; Mojtaba Khamenei's 21 May order to keep the 440.9 kg stockpile inside Iran remains operative.
United States
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Rubio placed the Iran-US deal at 95 per cent complete on 4 June while the administration signed no Iran instrument and OFAC designated only Cuban targets. Trump separately disclosed and rejected an airlift plan to collect Iran's HEU stockpile, claiming the material is "entombed", a claim the IAEA cannot verify.
China
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Beijing's MOFCOM Blocking Rules constrain OFAC enforcement on the mainland; China has not corroborated Trump's verbal account of any bilateral summit, and the rial's failure to hold its Rubio bounce, combined with the IRGC's stablecoin rail closure, increases Chinese yuan-denominated oil-payment exposure through Hormuz.
Bahrain
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