Accra, Ghana – April 26, 2026 – AfricaCoin, a pan-African stablecoin project focused on tokenizing real-world assets (RWAs), has achieved a significant milestone by being accepted into the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Ghana Virtual Asset Regulatory Sandbox. This move positions AfricaCoin among 11 approved companies tasked with piloting innovative digital asset services within a controlled regulatory environment.

The SEC Ghana sandbox, established under the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025, aims to foster crypto innovation while ensuring robust investor protection, market integrity, and compliance with anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism financing (CTF) standards. The program allows regulators to closely monitor and evaluate new financial technologies in real-world conditions before granting full market approval.

AfricaCoin's platform specializes in transforming tangible assets such as commodities, agricultural products, renewable energy projects, and mining resources into blockchain-based digital tokens. Each asset undergoes rigorous financial, legal, and technical verification before tokenization to ensure authenticity and proper valuation. Once tokenized, ownership records are immutably stored on the blockchain, enhancing transparency and security.

"The admission into the SEC Ghana regulatory sandbox represents a major step toward building a trusted and scalable framework for real-world asset tokenization in Africa," stated Vinod Khatumal, Chairman of AfricaCoin. This initiative is crucial for unlocking Africa's vast but often illiquid asset pool, making it more accessible to both domestic and international investors through fractional ownership.

The sandbox initiative is a critical component of Ghana's broader strategy to regulate the burgeoning digital asset market, providing a safe space for companies like AfricaCoin to test their offerings. The program lasts for 12 months, with a potential for full licensing after six months if companies meet all regulatory requirements. This regulatory clarity is expected to attract more investment and drive innovation across Africa's digital economy.