Royal Gold (RXAU) is a gold-referenced digital token designed to track the market value of one troy ounce of gold on blockchain networks. It is structured around physical gold reserves and is used for settlement, collateralization, and asset exposure within digital financial systems. [1]
RXAU is a gold-referenced digital token within the RCOINS ecosystem, issued by RIB Digital Holdings Limited. The token is designed to track the market value of one troy ounce of gold. It is intended for digital settlement, asset exposure, treasury allocation, collateralization, and structured financial operations across institutional and blockchain-based environments. RXAU operates on Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, and TRON using ERC-20, BEP-20, and TRC-20 standards, enabling multi-network accessibility and on-chain verification. Issuance and redemption are tied to verified physical gold reserves and supplementary collateral held under reserve frameworks intended to support liquidity and redemption processes. RXAU also incorporates reserve reporting, independent audits and certifications, on-chain supply visibility, transaction monitoring, sanctions screening, KYC/AML procedures, and smart contract-level controls intended to support transparency and compliance within regulated financial workflows. [2]
RXAU is structured around a reserve-backed model tied to physical gold holdings, with issuance and redemption aligned to verified reserves and supporting collateral frameworks. The token is designed with operational controls for minting, burning, and transfer processes conducted through compliance-checked mechanisms, including KYC/AML and sanctions screening. Reserves are intended to consist of allocated, insured physical gold and may be supplemented with additional liquidity buffers to support redemption conditions and market stability. Transparency is supported through on-chain supply tracking, reserve reporting, and independent verification processes that reconcile circulating tokens with underlying gold holdings. The ecosystem also incorporates governance separation between issuer, liquidity providers, and technology infrastructure to support accountability, operational resilience, and institutional-grade financial use. [2]