MIZATA, El Salvador тАУ El Salvador plans to build the worldтАЩs first тАЬBitcoin City,тАЭ funded initially by Bitcoin-backed bonds, President Nayib Bukele said on Saturday, doubling down on his bet to harness the cryptocurrency to fuel investment in the Central American country.
Speaking at an event closing a week-long promotion of Bitcoin in El Salvador, Bukele said the city planned in the eastern region of La Union would get geothermal power from a volcano and not levy any taxes except for value added tax (VAT).
тАЬInvest here and make all the money you want,тАЭ Bukele said in English, dressed all in white and wearing a reversed baseball cap, in the beach resort of Mizata. тАЬThis is a fully ecological city that works and is energized by a volcano.тАЭ
Half of the VAT levied would be used to fund the bonds issued to build the city, and the other half would pay for services such as garbage collection, Bukele said, estimating the public infrastructure would cost around 300,000 bitcoins.
El Salvador in September became the first country in the world to adopt bitcoin as legal tender.
Although Bukele is a popular president, opinion polls show Salvadorans are skeptical about his love of Bitcoin, and its bumpy introduction has fueled protests against the government.
Likening his plan to cities founded by Alexander the Great, Bukele said Bitcoin City would be circular, with an airport, residential and commercial areas, and feature a central plaza designed to look like a Bitcoin symbol from the air.
тАЬIf you want Bitcoin to spread over the world, we should build some Alexandrias,тАЭ said Bukele, a tech savvy 40-year-old who in September proclaimed himself тАЬdictatorтАЭ of El Salvador on Twitter in an apparent joke.
El Salvador planned to issue the initial bonds in 2022, Bukele said, suggesting it would be in 60 days time.
Samson Mow, chief strategy officer of blockchain technology provider Blockstream, told the gathering the first 10-year issue, known as the тАЬvolcano bondтАЭ, would be worth $1 billion, backed by Bitcoin and carrying a coupon of 6.5%. Half of the sum would go to buying bitcoins on the market, he said. Other bonds would follow.
After a five year lock-up, El Salvador would start selling some of the bitcoin used to fund the bond to give investors an тАЬadditional coupon,тАЭ Mow said, positing that the value of the cryptocurrency would continue to rise robustly.
тАЬThis is going to make El Salvador the financial center of the world,тАЭ he said.
The bond would be issued on the тАЬliquid networkтАЭ, a Bitcoin sidechain network. To facilitate the process, El SalvadorтАЩs government is working on a securities law, and the first license to operate an exchange would go to Bitfinex, Mow said.
Crypto exchange Bitfinex was listed as the book runner for the bond on a presentation behind Mow.
Once 10 such bonds were issued, $5 billion in bitcoin would be taken off the market for several years, Mow said. тАЬAnd if you get 100 more countries to do these bonds, thatтАЩs half of BitcoinтАЩs market cap right there.тАЭ
The тАЬgame theoryтАЭ on the bonds gave first issuer El Salvador an advantage, Mow argued, saying: тАЬIf Bitcoin at the five-year mark reaches $1 million, which I think it will, they will sell bitcoin in two quarters and recoup that $500 million.тАЭ
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