AYNI Gold
On-Chain Proof · AYNI Gold

Transparent, verifiable on-chain yield from real gold mining

A claim of “real yield” is only as good as your ability to verify it. AYNI is built so that the connection between physical gold and on-chain rewards can be checked — verifiable on-chain yield, not marketing.

Key figures

#070011405INGEMMET concession
RUC 20606465255operator registration
May 2025Phase 1 scoping study
$307k / 13,434.8 gpilot, recorded on-chain
100%PAXG backed by gold
≈ 9,000 kgconceptual exploration target

*Target Variable Reward is a target, not a guarantee; actual rewards vary and may be zero.

DeFi backed by the real economy

AYNI is DeFi backed by the real economy: a licensed gold operation in Madre de Dios, Peru (INGEMMET concession #070011405, operator Minerales San Hilario S.C.R.L., RUC 20606465255), characterised by a Phase 1 scoping study (May 2025) as a near-surface alluvial system.

Blockchain connected to physical assets

This is blockchain connected to physical assets in practice. A public Ethereum registry tracks participation-unit issuance, lock events, programme-fee allocations and distribution events, so the on-chain side mirrors the off-chain activity.

On-chain access to gold mining, with transparent cash flows

AYNI offers on-chain access to gold mining with transparent cash flows: rewards follow the published formula (extraction − operating costs − programme fee), and the pilot results (13,434.8 g → $307k distributed) are stated openly.

Independently reviewed and self-custodied

The AYNI smart contract (0x9d70baE2944Ffa477F37Bae227fd981E6eB31982) has been reviewed by CertiK and PeckShield. Custody uses TurnKey self-custody infrastructure, so programme administrators do not hold participant private keys.

FAQ

How can I verify the yield?
Check the Ethereum contract and registry for issuance and distribution events, review the CertiK/PeckShield audits, and verify the Peruvian concession via INGEMMET public records.
Who holds my keys?
You do. Custody is built on TurnKey self-custody, meaning administrators do not control participant private keys.