Thursday, February 22, 2018

After Releasing Oil-Backed Petro, Venezuelan President Hints At Gold-Backed "Petro Oro"

Authored by Molly Jane Zuckerman via CoinTelegraph.com,



After the "successful" launch of the Venezuelan government-backed cryptocurrency the Petro on Feb. 20, President Nicolas Maduro has already hinted at second government cryptocurrency soon to be released, according to government-sponsored news outlet TelSsur.





image courtesy of CoinTelegraph



This time, the government-backed cryptocurrency will be backed not by oil, but by gold.





image courtesy of CoinTelegraph



During a Patria Para Todos [Fatherland For All] party event at the National Theater in Caracas, Maduro announced,




“The petro is a cryptocurrency unique in the world that is supported by oil, and I have a surprise that I will launch next week, the Petro Oro [gold], backed by gold, even more powerful.”




Since the petro’s Initial Coin Offering (ICO) opened on Feb. 20, $735 mln has allegedly been raised, according to Maduro’s Twitter. No official numbers for the ICO had been released by press time.




Some Venezuelans on Twitter have used the hashtag, “#AlFuturoConElPetro,” [the future with the petro], to support the release of the coin. User José David Cabello R wrote,




“#AlFuturoConElPetro against any meddling, against the economic war, against the blockade. For the peace and Venezuela.”





Before the launch, foreign investors from Brazil, Poland, Denmark, Honduras, and Norway had reportedly said they were open to receiving the petro, which is backed by one barrel of oil per coin, for goods and services.



Venezuela is currently facing hyperinflation of more than 4,000 percent in the last year, with the national currency, the Bolivar, having lost around 96 percent of its value.



The president’s decision to launch a cryptocurrency was at odds with the views of the country’s opposition-backed parliament on crypto, which declared the petro an illegal currency on Jan. 9.



Critics in parliament see the petro as a way for Maduro to avoid the financial sanctions imposed by the West on Venezuela.

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