Kyrgyzstan’s Gold-Backed Dollar Pegged Stablecoin USDKG to Debut in Q3

Central Asian country Kyrgyzstan plans to debut the Gold Dollar, or USDKG, the gold-backed stablecoin pegged 1:1 with the U.S. dollar in the third quarter, project’s advisor Gabriel Guerra told CoinDesk at the Token2049 conference in Dubai.

The stablecoin, backed by $500 million in gold from the Kyrgyz Ministry of Finance, is designed to facilitate seamless cross-border transfers in a country where remittances account for 30% of the GDP.

The Ministry aims to expand the gold reserves to as much as $2 billion, with independent audits planned to ensure trust and transparency in the collateral backing.

Gold has long been regarded as a highly liquid, risk-free store of value. However, its occasional price swings pose a potential risk to the stability of the stablecoin.

To mitigate this, the stablecoin will be overcollateralized, Guerra noted, adding that its primary use case would be moving capital across borders.

“The stablecoin will be used in cross-border transactions and international trade with an initial focus on Central Asia and expansion into Southeast Asia and the Middle East planned for later,” Guerra said.

Note that USDKG is not intended to track gold prices like USDT or PAXG. Instead, it will be solely backed by gold reserves and issued and redeemed on a 1:1 basis with USD, maintaining a stable value tied directly to the global reserve fiat currency widely used in international trade.

USDKG holders can redeem their stablecoins for physical gold and other crypto assets or withdraw them as fiat currency.

​The stablecoin will be backed by $500 million in gold from the Kyrgyz Ministry of Finance, with plans to expand reserves to $2 billion. Markets, Gold, Stablecoin, Kyrgyzstan, Exclusive, News CoinDesk: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Crypto News and Price Data

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