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El Salvador’s long-planned Bitcoin bonds have inched closer to reality after apparently receiving regulatory approval for an early 2024 issuance, the country’s Bitcoin-focused office posted on Tuesday. The bonds are set to be offered on Bitfinex Securities, a regulated division of crypto exchange Bitfinex.
The bonds are expected to launch in Q1 of 2024, several posts amplified on social platform X by President Nayib Bukele suggest.
El Salvador’s long-planned Bitcoin bonds have inched closer to reality after apparently receiving regulatory approval for an early 2024 issuance, the country’s BTC-focused office posted on Tuesday.
The bonds are set to be offered on Bitfinex Securities, a regulated division of crypto exchange Bitfinex.
“The Volcano Bond has just received regulatory approval from the Digital Assets Commission (CNAD),” El Salvador’s National Bitcoin Office posted from its X handle. “We anticipate the bond will be issued during the first quarter of 2024.”
The so-called “Volcano bonds” were announced in 2021 by President Nayib Bukele shortly after he passed a law recognizing (BTC) as legal tender in the country.
Bukele’s target was to raise $1 billion via the BTC-backed bonds – seeding a BTC mining industry reliant solely on renewable energy, including that generated by the country’s active volcanos.
Issuance was initially planned for March 2022 but was postponed several times. However, the digital assets bill was finally introduced in the Legislative Assembly at the end of November 2022, where Bukele’s party, Nuevas Ideas, has a large majority.
Sixty-two legislators voted for the law today, and 16 voted against it, and the law was finally passed in January 2021.
The development is the second major bitcoin-focused move in as many weeks. Earlier, El Salvador kickstarted its “Freedom VISA” program, doling out residency to a maximum of 1,000 people annually who invest at least $1 million worth of bitcoin or tether (USDT) stablecoins.
The so-called “Volcano bonds” were announced in 2021 by President Nayib Bukele shortly after he passed a law recognizing bitcoin (BTC) as legal tender in the country.
Bukele’s target was to raise $1 billion via the BTC-backed bonds – seeding a bitcoin mining industry reliant solely on renewable energy, including that generated by the country’s active volcanos.
Issuance was initially planned for March 2022 but was postponed several times. However, the digital assets bill was finally introduced in the Legislative Assembly at the end of November 2022, where Bukele’s party, Nuevas Ideas, has a large majority.
Sixty-two legislators voted for the law today, and 16 voted against it, and the law was finally passed in January 2021.
The development is the second major bitcoin-focused move in as many weeks. Earlier, El Salvador kickstarted its “Freedom VISA” program, doling out residency to a maximum of 1,000 people annually who invest at least $1 million worth of bitcoin or tether (USDT) stablecoins.
The original story appeared on Coindesk.