A small island country in the Pacific has plans to launch its own government-issued cryptocurrency called the Marshallese sovereign (SOV). It was revealed Wednesday at CoinDeskâs Invest: Asia event that the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) would be introducing the SOV through a forthcoming token pre-sale.
Called the Timed Release Monetary Issuance (TRMI), RMI minister David Paul explained that anyone (regardless of location) can register for the pre-sale on the newly launched website of the SOV Development Foundation. Paul stressed that the actual pre-sale for SOV â in which users buy TRMI units that can later be exchanged one-for-one with SOV units â is not yet live and is still âa work in progress.â
But once launched, Paul estimated it would be 18 to 24 months, or even less, before the real SOV is made available to the public.
âIt could be well-vetted enough right before the TRMI that we donât need the full 18 to 24 months,â Paul said. âYou probably only need six months if all the preparation is done beforehand.â
One of the primary reason for doing this pre-sale, according to Paul, is to get a sense of the levels of liquidity and market interest in the SOV cryptocurrency.
Paul said:
âTRMI  is really another way of doing an [initial coin offering] but in a more responsible and methodical  manner. Thatâs really the TRMI. You have to look at how to establish liquidity. When you do TRMI, youâre looking at the appetite for the product and how itâs going to [behave] in the markets.â
This is a doubly important concern for government officials in the Marshall Islands given that the launch leaves no room for failure.
âFor us, itâs really the reputation and integrity of a country on the line. Weâve got one shot at this,â said Paul.
Apart from gauging market interest, Paul and his team at the non-profit SOV Development Foundation are also focused on addressing regulatory concerns surrounding the SOV raised by other countries and international organizations.
Last September, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) advised against the SOV project saying that the introduction of a cryptocurrency as legal tender in the country could âincrease macroeconomic and financial integrity risks.â
Even the U.S. Treasury had told the RMI government âpoint-blank,â according to Paul, that it didnât like the SOV. However, following nearly a year of internal discussions, Paul affirmed that U.S. officials are saying this project could work.
Getting the regulators on board is a key prerequisite to launching the TRMI, Paul said, adding:
âAÂ nation cannot rebrand [like a company can]. Thatâs why we have to do this in such a way thatâs different. It has to be transparent. It has to be inclusive. We need to make sure that we work with regulators to ensure that once we launch, they donât go back and say, âOh, you havenât done this. You should have done that.'â
David Paul image via CoinDesk LIVE at Invest: Asia 2o19