On October 24, 2025, Sign CEO Xin Yan officially signed the Digital SOM technical service agreement with Mels Sherikbaevich Attokurov, Vice Chairman of the National Bank of Kyrgyzstan. This is not an ordinary collaboration, but a key step in embedding blockchain into the sovereign financial system. President Sadyr Japarov and Binance founder CZ attended the event, essentially conveying a signal: cryptocurrency is no longer just a market game, but a part of national competitiveness.
Digital SOM, as a CBDC, signifies far more than just 'digital currency.' It reconstructs the payment system through on-chain architecture, enhances settlement efficiency, reduces financial friction, and facilitates cross-border trade and stablecoin flow. This is particularly critical against the backdrop of ongoing volatility in the Middle East and instability in traditional financial channels.
Why is this crucial for $SIGN ?
Because what @SignOfficial is doing is not a single-point product, but a whole suite of 'geoeconomic infrastructure.' When the Middle East faces payment fragmentation, constrained asset flows, and a shaken trust system, projects with on-chain compliance capabilities and sovereign cooperation experience will become the new 'connectors.'
$SIGN 's potential value is reflected in three levels:
First, is the ability to reconstruct the 'trust layer.' By collaborating with national banks, SIGN is not just a technology provider, but is also involved in building a national-level credit endorsement system.
Second, is the reconstruction of 'liquidity channels.' The combination of Digital SOM + stablecoin (KGST) means that new cross-border clearing networks can be built in constrained environments in the future, which is a scarce resource in the current Middle Eastern context.
Third, is the imaginative space of 'scalability.' From CBDC to RWA, and then to on-chain public services, SIGN is entering a trillion-level infrastructure track, rather than a single narrative.
Many people underestimate one point: when geopolitical instability occurs, what capital craves most is not returns, but 'accessibility' and 'security.' And what can provide these two points is not exchanges, but underlying protocols.
If the past cycle was a victory for trading platforms, then this cycle is likely to belong to projects like SIGN that are deeply embedded in national systems.
The uncertainty in the Middle East is instead amplifying the certainty of SIGN.
