The Ghana Securities and Exchange Commission has admitted 11 companies into a 12-month regulatory sandbox under the newly enacted VASP Act 2025, the country’s firstThe Ghana Securities and Exchange Commission has admitted 11 companies into a 12-month regulatory sandbox under the newly enacted VASP Act 2025, the country’s first

Ghana Just Opened a Regulatory Sandbox for 11 Crypto Companies

2026/03/12 07:25
3 min read
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The Ghana Securities and Exchange Commission has admitted 11 companies into a 12-month regulatory sandbox under the newly enacted VASP Act 2025, the country’s first formal framework for cryptocurrency trading, with the explicit goal of bringing an estimated $3 billion informal crypto market into a supervised financial system.

The Companies and What They Are Testing

The 11 admitted firms span three distinct operational tracks. Five cryptocurrency exchanges, Hyro Exchange, Hanypay, HSB Global, Koinkoin, and WhiteBit, are piloting virtual asset trading under live regulatory observation. Three asset tokenization firms, Vaulta, XChain, and Bsystem Ltd, are testing fractionalized ownership of global assets. The remaining three operate in specialized token categories: Africoin is tokenizing gold assets, Blu Penguin is developing tokenized payment systems, and GoldBod is building custodial infrastructure for gold-backed securities.

The gold tokenization cluster is the most Ghana-specific element of the sandbox composition. Ghana is the second largest gold producer in Africa. Africoin and GoldBod together represent an attempt to bring the country’s primary natural resource into digital asset infrastructure, creating tokenized exposure to an asset Ghana produces at scale but has historically exported without capturing significant domestic financial value from.

The Regulatory Architecture

The VASP Act passed in December 2025 establishes a dual-regulator model. The Securities and Exchange Commission oversees trading platforms and investment-related digital asset services. The Bank of Ghana handles exchange and custody frameworks. The sandbox structure reflects that division: the SEC’s 11 participants cover the trading and tokenization layer while the BoG separately admitted six fintech firms including Akuna Wallet and Transika Ltd into its own parallel sandbox earlier in 2026.

Companies that complete at least six months of the pilot while meeting risk and compliance requirements become eligible for formal operating licenses. That licensing pathway is the mechanism through which the sandbox converts informal market participants into regulated entities rather than simply testing technology in isolation.

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The $3 Billion Context

Ghana’s informal crypto market is estimated at $3 billion, built on the same structural demand drivers visible across Sub-Saharan Africa: currency hedging against cedi depreciation, remittance corridors, and cross-border payment infrastructure that traditional banking cannot serve efficiently or affordably. Blockchain.com’s Ghana launch covered earlier this week noted that the platform’s pre-launch period generated 140% active user growth and 80% volume growth organically before any official market entry, reflecting demand that exists independently of regulatory clarity.

Formalizing that $3 billion market does several things simultaneously. It creates a tax base from previously invisible economic activity. It establishes consumer protections for participants who currently have no recourse when platforms fail or defraud users. It builds the compliance infrastructure that international institutional partners require before engaging with Ghanaian crypto businesses. And it positions Ghana alongside Nigeria as the two West African anchors of the continent’s emerging regulated digital asset ecosystem.

The broader Sub-Saharan African crypto market recorded $205 billion in on-chain value between July 2024 and June 2025, as reported in the Blockchain.com Ghana coverage. Ghana’s sandbox is the regulatory infrastructure being built to capture a share of that activity under formal supervision rather than letting it remain outside the financial system entirely.

The post Ghana Just Opened a Regulatory Sandbox for 11 Crypto Companies appeared first on ETHNews.

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