The Herald (Zimbabwe)

RBZ digital gold coins reach 737kg

- Oliver Kazunga Senior Business Reporter

THE Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) has issued 736,52 kilogramme­s worth of goldbacked digital tokens since their introducti­on towards the end of last year.

The tokens, which are called Zimbabwe Gold or ZiG became an approved means of payment for domestic transactio­ns with effect from October last year.

Introduced following the Monetary Policy Committee’s resolution to complement physical gold coins, the tokens were released in 2022.

In a public notice following the issuance of the additional gold-backed digital tokens on Tuesday, the RBZ said cumulative­ly 736,518,865.00 milligramm­es equivalent to 736,52kg have been issued to date.

On Tuesday, the central bank said it had received 12 applicatio­ns from the market to buy ZiG where a total of $5,2 billion was realised by the monetary authority.

The price per milligramm­e of gold was $1, 078.01 while 4,86kg were bought.

“Applicatio­ns for the RBZ gold-backed digital tokens should be submitted through the banks and the GBDT will be issued daily on a tap basis,” it said.

Institutio­ns and individual­s have been able to buy the tokens using local or foreign currency from their banks.

The tokens have been available as an investment or store of value and were being issued to expand the value-preserving instrument­s available in the economy, enhance the divisibili­ty of the investment instrument­s, and widen their access as well as usage by the transactin­g public.

The ZiG is at par with the value of the physical Mosi-a-Tunya gold coin and remains informed by the internatio­nal gold price since it derives its value from gold reserves held by the RBZ.

ZiG accounts at financial institutio­ns run alongside the nostro and local currency accounts.

The gold coins and ZiG were introduced by the authoritie­s to complement measures introduced by the Government where the Treasury has been implementi­ng the value for money audits to do away with overpricin­g on public contracts and fronting loading exchange rates.

The greedy practices resulted in companies pocketing huge sums of Zimbabwe dollar liquidity, which they offloaded on the parallel foreign exchange market, driving interest rates that fuelled inflation resurgence.

 ?? ?? The ZiG is at par with the value of the physical Mosi-a-Tunya gold coin
The ZiG is at par with the value of the physical Mosi-a-Tunya gold coin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe