Paxos Gold
Moderate risk — strong regulatory framework and clean operational history, but concentrated counterparty dependency on Paxos Trust Company with token freeze capability.
Top Risks
Single regulated counterparty risk: Paxos Trust Company is the sole custodian and issuer of PAXG. Regulated by NYDFS, Paxos can freeze, seize, or blacklist tokens at any address. If Paxos faces regulatory action, insolvency, or operational failure, token holders lose their primary redemption path to physical gold. The bankruptcy-remote trust structure provides some protection, but ultimate recoverability depends on Paxos remaining a going concern.
Physical gold custody counterparty chain: PAXG backing relies on a chain of custodians — Paxos Trust holds title, Brinks vaults provide physical storage, and LBMA sets delivery standards. A failure at any point in this chain (vault breach, custodian insolvency, insurance shortfall) could impair the 1:1 gold backing. Monthly attestation by Withum provides transparency but not real-time proof of reserves.
Token freeze and blacklist capability: Paxos has demonstrated the ability and willingness to freeze PAXG tokens, as shown when they froze $20M of PAXG from FTX hack-related wallets in 2022. While this protected assets in that case, it means any PAXG holder's tokens can be frozen by Paxos unilaterally, creating censorship risk for DeFi users.
Limited on-chain utility and development: PAXG is primarily a tokenized representation of physical gold with minimal DeFi integration or protocol development beyond the basic ERC-20 token. There is no governance, no yield mechanism, and limited smart contract complexity — which reduces technical risk but also means the token's value proposition is entirely dependent on Paxos's continued operation.