What is a Stablebond
Last updated: June 11, 2026
What a Stablebond is
A Stablebond is a tokenized government bond. Each one is backed 1:1 by real sovereign debt — for example Mexican CETES, US Treasuries, Brazilian Tesouro, UK Gilts, Eurobonds, or Korean Treasury Bonds — and it pays you the underlying bond’s yield while you simply hold the token.
Why it is useful
Yield on idle cash: put balances to work in short-term sovereign bonds instead of leaving them idle.
Reward-bearing: you hold a fixed number of tokens and each one grows in value over time (see “How Stablebond yield works”).
Self-custodied & tradeable: you hold the token in your own wallet and can move or use it across supported networks.
Multi-currency: earn yield denominated in the local currency of each bond.
How you use it
Buy (on-ramp): pay with local currency or a stablecoin and receive the Stablebond token.
Hold: the token accrues the underlying bond’s yield continuously — nothing to claim.
Redeem (off-ramp): sell back to local currency or a stablecoin any time the underlying markets are open.
Backing & custody
The underlying bonds are held with regulated custodians (such as BBVA, Shinhan, and B3), separate from Etherfuse, with regular third-party proof-of-reserves attestations.
Where Stablebonds live
Stablebonds are available across multiple blockchains, including Solana, Stellar, Base, Polygon, and Monad.