Sovereign debt just showed up onchain. BitGo announced custody and off-exchange settlement services for USDM1, a USD-denominated bond issued by the Republic of the Marshall Islands and structured as the first natively issued onchain sovereign bond in history.
This is not a tokenized version of an existing bond. USDM1 was born onchain, designed from the ground up to live on Stellar, Ethereum, and Solana simultaneously.
What USDM1 actually is
USDM1 is fully collateralized, structured under New York law, and backed 1:1 by short-duration U.S. Treasuries held in a bankruptcy-remote structure. Every USDM1 token has a real Treasury bill sitting behind it in a legally isolated account. If the issuer goes under, the collateral does not go with it.
The bond accrues value daily and comes with enforceable par redemption, meaning holders can redeem at face value under defined conditions. That feature alone separates it from most yield-bearing stablecoins, which offer similar economic exposure without the legal enforcement mechanisms.
USDM1 has potential compatibility with Level 1 High-Quality Liquid Asset treatment, subject to regulatory determinations. That is the same classification U.S. government bonds currently hold under Basel III liquidity rules. If regulators eventually agree, institutions could use USDM1 to satisfy liquidity buffer requirements.
What BitGo brings to the table
BitGo’s role here is custody and settlement infrastructure. Institutional clients can hold USDM1 in segregated, regulated cold storage with offline key management.
BitGo enables T+0 off-exchange settlement around the clock. Traditional sovereign bond markets typically settle on a T+1 or T+2 basis. T+0 means settlement happens the same session, without requiring assets to move onto an exchange first. It reduces counterparty exposure during the settlement window and opens the door to using USDM1 in margin trading and treasury workflows.
BitGo also confirmed the arrangement includes industry-standard legal documentation, which matters for institutional prime brokers and custodians that have strict requirements around documentation before they will accept an asset as eligible collateral.
The Marshall Islands and a genuinely unusual use case
The Republic of the Marshall Islands is a small Pacific island nation spread across more than 1,200 islands. The RMI embedded USDM1 directly into its 20-year nationwide Universal Basic Income program. The bond is actively being used to distribute government payments to citizens across islands that, in some cases, have limited access to conventional banking.
That dual function—yield-bearing institutional asset and government disbursement rail—is genuinely novel. It demonstrates that a sovereign government can issue debt natively on public blockchains, use that debt to fund domestic programs, and simultaneously offer it to institutional investors through regulated custody channels.
What this means for institutional crypto and sovereign finance
Rather than tokenizing an instrument that already exists in traditional markets, the RMI issued the bond directly onchain from day one. A natively onchain sovereign bond does not require a bridge between legacy settlement systems and blockchain rails. The asset starts onchain, settles onchain, and accrues yield onchain.
The multi-chain deployment across Stellar, Ethereum, and Solana is a deliberate choice. Stellar has deep roots in cross-border payment corridors. Ethereum remains the dominant layer for institutional DeFi and tokenized assets. Solana offers throughput and low transaction costs that make it viable for high-frequency settlement operations.
















