Recently, what has truly been re-evaluated is not just oil prices, but also the underlying logic of global capital, identity, and settlement systems. The situation in the Middle East is repeatedly escalating, and the risks in the Strait of Hormuz are rising. The market is beginning to realize that during turbulent times, what is most scarce is not liquidity, but rather credible payment, compliance, and collaborative infrastructure.
This is also the reason why SIGN @SignOfficial has been continuously focused on. Many people treat it as an ordinary cryptocurrency, but it is more like a verifiable sovereign-level trust network. It does not solve whether transfers can be made on-chain, but rather who is eligible to receive payments, who has completed compliance, what rules the funds are executed under, and whether the entire process can be verified and audited.
For example, government subsidy distribution, cross-border trade settlement, stablecoin clearing, institutional KYC certification—these scenarios all require a verifiable proof system. The value of SIGN lies here: turning identity, authorization, payment, and compliance records into verifiable facts on-chain.
Meme coins capture attention, ordinary public chains capture expectations, and SIGN captures the reconstruction of order. As both the Middle East and the world accelerate the upgrade of digital financial infrastructure, what SIGN represents is not just a currency, but potentially the underlying entry point for the next round of digital sovereignty and on-chain financial systems.

