White paper drafted under the European Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 for FFG C4CQCGLH2

2026-01-29 Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH 2HBR Lange Reihe 73, 20099 Hamburg https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#DE HH 2018-12-03 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 HRB 154488 030 true true Not specified. https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA 1970-01-01 Aptos Labs https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Aptos Foundation https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Mo Shaikh https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Avery Ching https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Alin Tomescu https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Greg Nazario https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Josh Lind https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Rati Gelashivili https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Rustie Lin https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Sasha Spiegelman https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Sital Kedia https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Zekun Li https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Alex Mittendorf https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Ariana Gianacopoulos https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Pranav Raval https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Solomon Tesfaye https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA Investors https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherPersonInvolvedInImplementation https://xbrl.org/2024/iso3166#VA false https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#AdmissionToTrading 1190000000 Payward Global Solutions LTD PGSL The crypto-asset described in the white paper is classified as a crypto-asset under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) but is neither classified as an electronic money token (EMT) or an asset-referenced token (ART). It is a digital representation of value that can be stored and transferred using distributed ledger technology (DLT) or similar technology, without embodying or conferring any rights to its holder. The asset does not aim to maintain a stable value by referencing an official currency, a basket of assets, or any other underlying rights. Instead, its valuation is entirely market-driven, based on supply and demand dynamics, and not governed by a stabilisation mechanism. It is neither pegged to any fiat currency nor backed by any external assets, thereby clearly distinguishing it from EMTs and ARTs. Furthermore, the crypto-asset is not categorised as a financial instrument, deposit, insurance product, pension product, or any other regulated financial product under EU law. It does not grant financial rights, voting rights, or any contractual claims to its holders, ensuring that it remains outside the scope of regulatory frameworks applicable to traditional financial instruments. https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#OtherCryptoassetWhitePaper https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#NewTypeOfSubmission false true true https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#GermanyMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#AustriaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#BelgiumMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#BulgariaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#CroatiaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#CyprusMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#CzechiaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#DenmarkMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#EstoniaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#FinlandMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#FranceMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#GreeceMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#HungaryMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#IcelandMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#IrelandMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#ItalyMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#LatviaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#LiechtensteinMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#LithuaniaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#LuxembourgMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#MaltaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#NetherlandsMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#NorwayMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#PolandMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#PortugalMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#RomaniaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#SlovakiaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#SloveniaMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#SpainMemberState https://www.esma.europa.eu/taxonomy/2025-03-31/mica/#SwedenMemberState 0 false true false false false false false 262800.00000 31.3817462059 0.00011 0.00000 87.46328 0.00000 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 2 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 1 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 13 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 11 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 8 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 16 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 3 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 6 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 0 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 15 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 12 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 5 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 10 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 0 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-21 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 14 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 0 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 9 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 7 39120077M9TG0O1FE242 2026-02-07 2026-02-21 4 iso4217:EUR utr:kWh utr:tCO2e xbrli:pure

Preamble

00. Table of Content

  1. Preamble
  2. Part A – Information about the offeror or the person seeking admission to trading
  3. Part B – Information about the issuer, if different from the offeror or person seeking admission to trading
  4. Part C – Information about the operator of the trading platform in cases where it draws up the crypto-asset white paper and information about other persons drawing the crypto-asset white paper pursuant to Article 6(1), second subparagraph, of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114
  5. Part D – Information about the crypto-asset project
  6. Part E – Information about the offer to the public of crypto-assets or their admission to trading
  7. Part F – Information about the crypto-assets
  8. Part G – Information on the rights and obligations attached to the crypto-assets
  9. Part H – information on the underlying technology
  10. Part I – Information on risks
  11. Part J – Information on the sustainability indicators in relation to adverse impact on the climate and other environment-related adverse impacts

01. Date of notification

This white paper was notified at 2026-01-29.

02. Statement in accordance with Article 6(3) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

This crypto-asset white paper has not been approved by any competent authority in any Member State of the European Union. The person seeking admission to trading of the crypto-asset is solely responsible for the content of this crypto-asset white paper.

03. Compliance statement in accordance with Article 6(6) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

This crypto-asset white paper complies with Title II of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council and, to the best of the knowledge of the management body, the information presented in the crypto-asset white paper is fair, clear and not misleading and the crypto-asset white paper makes no omission likely to affect its import.

04. Statement in accordance with Article 6(5), points (a), (b), (c), of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

The crypto-asset referred to in this crypto-asset white paper may lose its value in part or in full, may not always be transferable and may not be liquid.

05. Statement in accordance with Article 6(5), point (d), of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

As defined in Article 3(9) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 May 2023 on Markets in Crypto-Assets – amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010 and Directives 2013/36/EU and (EU) 2019/1937 – a utility token is “a type of crypto-asset that is only intended to provide access to a good or a service supplied by its issuer”. This crypto-asset does not qualify as a utility token, as its intended use goes beyond providing access to a good or service supplied solely by the issuer.

06. Statement in accordance with Article 6(5), points (e) and (f), of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

The crypto-asset referred to in this white paper is not covered by the investor compensation schemes under Directive 97/9/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council or the deposit guarantee schemes under Directive 2014/49/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council.

Summary

07. Warning in accordance with Article 6(7), second subparagraph, of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

Warning: This summary should be read as an introduction to the crypto-asset white paper. The prospective holder should base any decision to purchase this crypto–asset on the content of the crypto-asset white paper as a whole and not on the summary alone. The offer to the public of this crypto-asset does not constitute an offer or solicitation to purchase financial instruments and any such offer or solicitation can be made only by means of a prospectus or other offer documents pursuant to the applicable national law. This crypto-asset white paper does not constitute a prospectus as referred to in Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 of the European Parliament and of the Council or any other offer document pursuant to Union or national law.

08. Characteristics of the crypto-asset

The crypto-asset Aptos Coin (APT) referred to in this white paper is a crypto-asset other than EMTs and ARTs, and operates on the Aptos blockchain, a distributed ledger system designed to support the execution of transactions and smart contracts. The total supply of APT is not fixed and may change over time. The network is based on open-source software and enables participants to submit transactions, deploy and interact with smart contracts, and maintain a shared ledger state without reliance on a central intermediary.

The crypto-asset does not grant any legally enforceable or contractual rights or obligations to its holders or purchasers. Any functionalities accessible through the underlying technology are purely technical or operational in nature and do not confer rights comparable to ownership, profit participation, governance, or similar entitlements known from traditional financial instruments.

09. Information about the quality and quantity of goods or services to which the utility tokens give access and restrictions on the transferability

As defined in Article 3(9) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 May 2023 on Markets in Crypto-Assets – amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010 and Directives 2013/36/EU and (EU) 2019/1937 – a utility token is “a type of crypto-asset that is only intended to provide access to a good or a service supplied by its issuer”. This crypto-asset does not qualify as a utility token, as its intended use goes beyond providing access to a good or service supplied solely by the issuer.

10. Key information about the offer to the public or admission to trading

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is seeking admission to trading on Payward Global Solutions LTD ("Kraken") platform in the European Union in accordance with Article 5 of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 May 2023 on Markets in Crypto-Assets, and amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010 and Directives 2013/36/EU and (EU) 2019/1937. The admission to trading is not accompanied by a public offer of the crypto-asset.

Part A – Information about the offeror or the person seeking admission to trading

A.1 Name

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is the person seeking admission to trading.

A.2 Legal form

The legal form of Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is 2HBR, which corresponds to "Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung".

A.3 Registered address

The registered address of Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is Lange Reihe 73, 20099 Hamburg,

Germany,

federal state Hamburg.

A.4 Head office

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH has no head office.

A.5 Registration date

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH was registered on 2018-12-03.

A.6 Legal entity identifier

The Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) of Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is 39120077M9TG0O1FE242.

A.7 Another identifier required pursuant to applicable national law

The national identifier of Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is HRB 154488.

A.8 Contact telephone number

+4915144974120

A.9 E-mail address

info@crypto-risk-metrics.com

A.10 Response time (Days)

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH will respond to investor enquiries within 30 calendar days.

A.11 Parent company

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH has no parent company.

A.12 Members of the management body

Identity Function Business Address
Tim Zölitz Chairman Lange Reihe 73, 20099 Hamburg, Germany

A.13 Business activity

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is a technical service provider, which supports regulated entities in the fulfilment of their regulatory requirements. In this regard, Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH, among other services, acts as a data-provider for ESG data according to article 66 (5). Due to the regulations laid out in article 4 (7), 5 (4) and 66 (3) of the Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 May 2023 on markets in crypto-assets, and amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010 and Directives 2013/36/EU and (EU) 2019/1937, Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH aims to provide central services for crypto-asset white papers.

A.14 Parent company business activity

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH does not have a parent company. Accordingly, no business activity of a parent company is to be reported in this section.

A.15 Newly established

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH has been established since 2018-12-03 and is therefore not newly established (i. e. more than three years).

A.16 Financial condition for the past three years

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH, founded in 2018 and based in Hamburg (HRB 154488), has undergone several strategic shifts in its business focus since incorporation. Due to these changes in business model and operational direction over time, the financial figures from earlier years are only comparable to a limited extent with the company’s current commercial activities. The present business model – centred around regulatory technology and risk analytics in the context of the MiCAR framework – has been established progressively and can be realistically considered fully operational since approximately 2024.

The company’s financial trajectory over the past three years reflects the transition from exploratory development toward market-ready product delivery. The profit and loss after tax for the last three financial years is as follows:

2024 (unaudited): negative EUR 50.891,81

2023 (unaudited): negative EUR 27.665,32

2022: EUR 104.283,00.

The profit in 2022 resulted primarily from legacy consulting activities, which were discontinued in the course of the company’s repositioning.

The losses in 2023 and 2024 result from strategic investments in the development of proprietary software infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, and compliance technology for the MiCAR ecosystem. During those periods, no substantial commercial revenues were expected, as resources were directed toward preparing the platform for regulated market entry.

A fundamental repositioning of the company occurred in 2023 and especially in 2024, when the focus shifted toward providing risk management, regulatory reporting, and supervisory compliance solutions for financial institutions and crypto-asset service providers. This marked a material shift in business operations and monetisation strategy.

Based on the current business development in Q4 2025, revenues exceeding EUR 550,000 are expected for the fiscal year 2025, with an anticipated net profit of approximately EUR 100,000. These figures are neither audited nor based on a finalized annual financial statement; they are derived from the company’s current pipeline, client development, and active commercial engagements. Accordingly, they are subject to future risks and market fluctuations.

With the regulatory environment now taking shape and the platform commercially validated, it is assumed that the effects of the strategic developments will continue to materialize in 2026. The company foresees further scalability of its technology and growing market demand for regulatory compliance tools in the European crypto-asset sector.

No public subsidies or governmental grants have been received to date; all operations have been financed through shareholder contributions and internally generated resources. Crypto Risk Metrics has never accepted any payments via Tokens from projects it has worked for and – due to the internal Conflicts of Interest Policy – never will.

A.17 Financial condition since registration

Not applicable. The company has been established for more than three years and its financial condition over the past three years is provided in Part A.16 above.

Part B – Information about the issuer, if different from the offeror or person seeking admission to trading

B.1 Issuer different from offeror or person seeking admission to trading

Yes, the issuer is different from the person seeking admission to trading.

B.2 Name

At the time of drafting this white paper, no single formal issuer within the meaning of MiCAR can be clearly identified for the APT crypto-asset. Publicly available information indicates that Aptos Labs has played a significant role in the initial development and coordination of the Aptos blockchain. However, Aptos Labs is not publicly described as exercising unilateral control over the protocol or acting as an issuer with ongoing responsibility for the crypto-asset. Protocol governance and network operation are described as being conducted through protocol-defined mechanisms and decentralised participation. Accordingly, there is no central legal entity that can be clearly identified as responsible for the issuance or administration of APT in the capacity of an issuer under MiCAR.

B.3 Legal form

Not applicable.

B.4 Registered address

Not applicable.

Not applicable.

Not applicable.

B.5 Head office

Not applicable.

Not applicable.

Not applicable.

B.6 Registration date

Not applicable.

B.7 Legal entity identifier

Not applicable.

B.8 Another identifier required pursuant to applicable national law

Not applicable.

B.9 Parent company

Not applicable.

B.10 Members of the management body

Identity Function Business Address
Could not be identified Not applicable Not applicable

B.11 Business activity

Not applicable.

B.12 Parent company business activity

Not applicable.

Part C – Information about the operator of the trading platform in cases where it draws up the crypto-asset white paper and information about other persons drawing the crypto-asset white paper pursuant to Article 6(1), second subparagraph, of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

C.1 Name

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.2 Legal form

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.3 Registered address

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.4 Head office

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.5 Registration date

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.6 Legal entity identifier

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.7 Another identifier required pursuant to applicable national law

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.8 Parent company

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.9 Reason for crypto-Asset white paper Preparation

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.10 Members of the Management body

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.11 Operator business activity

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.12 Parent company business activity

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.13 Other persons drawing up the crypto-asset white paper according to Article 6(1), second subparagraph, of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

C.14 Reason for drawing the white paper by persons referred to in Article 6(1), second subparagraph, of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114

Not applicable since Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is not a trading platform.

Part D – Information about the crypto-asset project

D.1 Crypto-asset project name

Long Name: "Aptos Coin", Short Name: "APT" according to the Digital Token Identifier Foundation (www.dtif.org, DTI see F.13, FFG DTI see F.14 as of 2026-01-18).

D.2 Crypto-assets name

Long Name: "Aptos Coin" according to the Digital Token Identifier Foundation (www.dtif.org, DTI see F.13, FFG DTI see F.14 as of 2026-01-18).

D.3 Abbreviation

Short Name: "APT" according to the Digital Token Identifier Foundation (www.dtif.org, DTI see F.13, FFG DTI see F.14 as of 2026-01-18).

D.4 Crypto-asset project description

The Aptos crypto-asset (APT) operates on the Aptos blockchain, a distributed ledger system designed to support the execution of transactions and smart contracts. The network is based on open-source software and enables participants to submit transactions, deploy and interact with smart contracts, and maintain a shared ledger state without reliance on a central intermediary.

The Aptos blockchain was initially developed by contributors who later formed Aptos Labs, which has been publicly associated with early research, development, and ecosystem coordination activities. The ongoing operation of the network is governed by protocol rules and decentralised participation.

The APT crypto-asset does not represent ownership, equity, or a claim against any legal entity. Its functionality and continued operation depend on network participation, protocol rules, and adoption of the underlying software by node operators and users.

D.5 Details of all natural or legal persons involved in the implementation of the crypto-asset project

Type of person Name of person Business address of person Domicile of company

Other person involved in implementation

Aptos Labs

US, 735, Emerson St., Palo Alto, CA 94301

United States of America

Other person involved in implementation

Aptos Foundation

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Mo Shaikh

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Avery Ching

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Alin Tomescu

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Greg Nazario

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Josh Lind

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Rati Gelashivili

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Rustie Lin

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Sasha Spiegelman

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Sital Kedia

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Zekun Li

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Alex Mittendorf

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Ariana Gianacopoulos

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Pranav Raval

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Solomon Tesfaye

Can not be found

Can not be found

Other person involved in implementation

Investors

Can not be found

Can not be found

D.6 Utility Token Classification

As defined in Article 3(9) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 May 2023 on Markets in Crypto-Assets – amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010 and Directives 2013/36/EU and (EU) 2019/1937 – a utility token is “a type of crypto-asset that is only intended to provide access to a good or a service supplied by its issuer”. This crypto-asset does not qualify as a utility token, as its intended use goes beyond providing access to a good or service supplied solely by the issuer.

D.7 Key Features of Goods/Services for Utility Token Projects

As defined in Article 3(9) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 May 2023 on Markets in Crypto-Assets – amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010 and Directives 2013/36/EU and (EU) 2019/1937 – a utility token is “a type of crypto-asset that is only intended to provide access to a good or a service supplied by its issuer”. This crypto-asset does not qualify as a utility token, as its intended use goes beyond providing access to a good or service supplied solely by the issuer.

D.8 Plans for the token

This section provides an overview of the historical developments related to the Aptos Coin crypto-asset and a description of planned or anticipated project milestones as publicly communicated. All forward-looking elements are subject to significant uncertainty. They do not constitute commitments, assurances, or guarantees and may be modified, delayed, or discontinued at any time. Past developments cannot be assumed to continue, and changes may affect token holders.

Past milestones:

- Project origination and early development (2021–2022):

Public sources indicate that development work on the Aptos blockchain originated from prior research into distributed ledger technology and smart contract execution environments. Early development activities focused on protocol design, tooling, and test network deployments.

- Mainnet launch (12 October 2022):

According to public disclosures, the Aptos mainnet was launched on 12 October 2022. At launch, the APT crypto-asset was introduced with an initial total supply of 1 billion units, allocated across predefined categories and subject to vesting and lock-up arrangements.

- Post-launch protocol operation and updates (2022 onward):

Following mainnet launch, the Aptos network entered ongoing operation. Publicly documented activities include software updates, validator participation, and continued development of protocol components and developer tooling, implemented through publicly released code and network participation.

Future milestones:

- Protocol maintenance and upgrades:

Public communications indicate an intention to continue maintaining and updating the Aptos protocol software. Such updates may relate to protocol parameters, software implementations, or compatibility and are subject to governance processes and adoption by network participants.

- Token distribution and vesting progression:

Based on publicly disclosed tokenomics information, portions of the APT supply allocated at genesis remain subject to vesting and scheduled distribution over an extended period. The gradual release of these tokens is expected to continue in accordance with predefined schedules.

- Ecosystem-related activities:

Public materials reference ongoing or planned activities related to ecosystem support, including grants, incentives, or other programmes intended to support network usage. The scope, timing, and outcome of such activities remain dependent on governance decisions and resource availability.

All described future developments represent intended or potential milestones only. They remain dependent on technological feasibility, resource allocation, regulatory considerations, and general project priorities. There is no certainty that these developments will occur, occur as described, or be maintained in the long term. Deviations from the roadmap may occur without prior notice, and changes may negatively affect the usability or relevance of the token.

D.9 Resource allocation

Based on information from various third-party sources, it can be assumed that the crypto-asset project has attracted interest from external investors. Publicly available materials reference several well-known institutional and strategic investors, including venture capital firms and corporate entities, as having been associated with the project. Based on the information visually referenced in the provided material, the following investors are named:

Andreessen Horowitz, Apollo, Dragonfly, Franklin Templeton, Multicoin Capital, PayPal.

However, the precise nature of these relationships, as well as any details regarding investment amounts, structures, timing, or legal arrangements, cannot be independently verified. Consequently, such information should be regarded as indicative only and subject to uncertainty.

D.10 Planned use of Collected funds or crypto-Assets

Not applicable, as this white paper serves the purpose of admission to trading and is not associated with any fundraising activity for the crypto-asset project.

Part E – Information about the offer to the public of crypto-assets or their admission to trading

E.1 Public offering or admission to trading

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH is the person seeking admission to trading.

E.2 Reasons for public offer or admission to trading

The purpose of seeking admission to trading is to enable the crypto-asset to be listed on a regulated platform in accordance with the applicable provisions of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 and Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2024/2984. The white paper has been drawn up to comply with the transparency requirements applicable to trading venues.

E.3 Fundraising target

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.4 Minimum subscription goals

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.5 Maximum subscription goals

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.6 Oversubscription acceptance

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.7 Oversubscription allocation

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.8 Issue price

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.9 Official currency or any other crypto-assets determining the issue price

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.10 Subscription fee

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.11 Offer price determination method

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.12 Total number of offered/traded crypto-assets

According to publicly available on-chain and secondary market data as of the date of drafting, the total supply of the APT crypto-asset is approximately 1.19 billion APT, while the circulating supply is approximately 750 million APT. These figures reflect the supply recorded in December 2025 and are derived from publicly accessible market data aggregators and blockchain-based information.

The total supply of APT is not fixed and may change over time. The Aptos protocol provides for the issuance of additional APT units in accordance with predefined emission schedules. At the same time, portions of the total supply remain subject to lock-up and vesting arrangements established at the time of initial allocation.

As a result, the circulating supply may differ materially from the total supply at any given time and may fluctuate due to emissions, vesting unlocks, or other protocol-defined conditions. Consequently, the total number of APT units available to the public or admitted to trading is subject to ongoing change and does not represent a permanently fixed quantity.

E.13 Targeted holders

The admission of the crypto-asset to trading is open to all types of investors.

E.14 Holder restrictions

Holder restrictions are subject to the rules applicable to the crypto-asset service provider, as well as to any additional restrictions such provider may impose.

E.15 Reimbursement notice

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.16 Refund mechanism

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.17 Refund timeline

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.18 Offer phases

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.19 Early purchase discount

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.20 Time-limited offer

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.21 Subscription period beginning

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.22 Subscription period end

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.23 Safeguarding arrangements for offered funds/crypto- Assets

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.24 Payment methods for crypto-asset purchase

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.25 Value transfer methods for reimbursement

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.26 Right of withdrawal

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.27 Transfer of purchased crypto-assets

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.28 Transfer time schedule

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.29 Purchaser's technical requirements

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.30 Crypto-asset service provider (CASP) name

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.31 CASP identifier

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.32 Placement form

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.33 Trading platforms name

The admission to trading is sought on Payward Global Solutions LTD ("Kraken").

E.34 Trading platforms Market identifier code (MIC)

The Market Identifier Code (MIC) of Payward Global Solutions LTD ("Kraken") is PGSL.

E.35 Trading platforms access

The token is intended to be listed on the trading platform operated by Payward Global Solutions LTD ("Kraken"). Access to this platform depends on regional availability and user eligibility under Kraken’s terms and conditions. Investors should consult Kraken’s official documentation to determine whether they meet the requirements for account creation and token trading.

E.36 Involved costs

The costs involved in accessing the trading platform depend on the specific fee structure and terms of the respective crypto-asset service provider. These may include trading fees, deposit or withdrawal charges, and network-related gas fees. Investors are advised to consult the applicable fee schedule of the chosen platform before engaging in trading activities.

E.37 Offer expenses

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.38 Conflicts of interest

MiCAR-compliant crypto-asset service providers shall have strong measures in place in order to manage conflicts of interests. Due to the broad audience this white paper is addressing, potential investors should always check the conflicts-of-interest policy of their respective counterparty.

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH has established, implemented, and documented comprehensive internal policies and procedures for the identification, prevention, management, and documentation of conflicts of interest in accordance with applicable regulatory requirements. These internal measures are actively applied within the organisation. For the purposes of this specific assessment and the crypto-asset covered by this white paper, a token-specific review has been conducted by Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH. Based on this individual review, no conflicts of interest relevant to this crypto-asset have been identified at the time of preparation of this white paper.

E.39 Applicable law

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

E.40 Competent court

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

Part F – Information about the crypto-assets

F.1 Crypto-asset type

The crypto-asset described in the white paper is classified as a crypto-asset under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) but is neither classified as an electronic money token (EMT) or an asset-referenced token (ART).

It is a digital representation of value that can be stored and transferred using distributed ledger technology (DLT) or similar technology, without embodying or conferring any rights to its holder.

The asset does not aim to maintain a stable value by referencing an official currency, a basket of assets, or any other underlying rights. Instead, its valuation is entirely market-driven, based on supply and demand dynamics, and not governed by a stabilisation mechanism. It is neither pegged to any fiat currency nor backed by any external assets, thereby clearly distinguishing it from EMTs and ARTs.

Furthermore, the crypto-asset is not categorised as a financial instrument, deposit, insurance product, pension product, or any other regulated financial product under EU law. It does not grant financial rights, voting rights, or any contractual claims to its holders, ensuring that it remains outside the scope of regulatory frameworks applicable to traditional financial instruments.

F.2 Crypto-asset functionality

APT is a cryptographic token used within the Aptos blockchain to interact with protocol-level functions. Transactions on the network are recorded on the distributed ledger and executed in accordance with protocol rules.

APT may be used in connection with transaction execution, participation in protocol governance mechanisms, and other protocol-defined processes. Transfers of APT occur directly between blockchain addresses and are validated by network participants operating nodes.

The functionality of APT is limited to what is enabled by the Aptos protocol and compatible software. No assurance is given that any specific function will remain available or unchanged over time.

F.3 Planned application of functionalities

Future milestones:

- Protocol maintenance and upgrades:

Public communications indicate an intention to continue maintaining and updating the Aptos protocol software. Such updates may relate to protocol parameters, software implementations, or compatibility and are subject to governance processes and adoption by network participants.

- Token distribution and vesting progression:

Based on publicly disclosed tokenomics information, portions of the APT supply allocated at genesis remain subject to vesting and scheduled distribution over an extended period. The gradual release of these tokens is expected to continue in accordance with predefined schedules.

- Ecosystem-related activities:

Public materials reference ongoing or planned activities related to ecosystem support, including grants, incentives, or other programmes intended to support network usage. The scope, timing, and outcome of such activities remain dependent on governance decisions and resource availability.

All described future developments represent intended or potential milestones only. They remain dependent on technological feasibility, resource allocation, regulatory considerations, and general project priorities. There is no certainty that these developments will occur, occur as described, or be maintained in the long term. Deviations from the roadmap may occur without prior notice, and changes may negatively affect the usability or relevance of the token.

A description of the characteristics of the crypto asset, including the data necessary for classification of the crypto-asset white paper in the register referred to in Article 109 of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, as specified in accordance with paragraph 8 of that Article

F.4 Type of crypto-asset white paper

The white paper type is "Other crypto-assets" (i. e. "OTHR").

F.5 The type of submission

The type of submission is NEWT (New white paper).

F.6 Crypto-asset characteristics

The crypto-assets are crypto-assets other than EMTs and ARTs, which are available on the Aptos blockchain. The crypto-assets are fungible. Investors should note that there is no permanently fixed maximum supply. The crypto-asset is subject to an ongoing emission framework, under which additional tokens may be issued in the future for liquidity incentives and ecosystem development.

The crypto-asset constitutes a digital representation recorded on distributed-ledger technology and does not confer ownership, governance, profit participation, or any other legally enforceable rights. Any functionalities associated with the token are limited to potential technical features within the relevant platform environment. These functionalities do not represent contractual entitlements and may depend on future development decisions, technical design choices, and operational conditions. The crypto-asset does not embody intrinsic economic value; instead, its value, if any, is determined exclusively by market dynamics such as supply, demand, and liquidity in secondary markets.

F.7 Commercial name or trading name

Long Name: "Aptos Coin" according to the Digital Token Identifier Foundation (www.dtif.org, DTI see F.13, FFG DTI see F.14 as of 2026-01-07).

F.8 Website of the issuer

No formal issuer can be identified for the crypto-asset. Further information regarding the crypto-asset project is available at: https://aptoslabs.com/

F.9 Starting date of offer to the public or admission to trading

2026-02-27

F.10 Publication date

2026-02-27

F.11 Any other services provided by the issuer

It is not possible to exclude a possibility that the issuer of the token provides or will provide other services not covered by Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 (i.e. MiCAR).

F.12 Language or languages of the crypto-asset white paper

EN

F.13 Digital token identifier code used to uniquely identify the crypto-asset or each of the several crypto assets to which the white paper relates

SSFZXXTDD, SMB9ZBCGN

F.14 Functionally fungible group digital token identifier

C4CQCGLH2

F.15 Voluntary data flag

This white paper has been submitted as mandatory under Regulation (EU) 2023/1114.

F.16 Personal data flag

Yes, this white paper contains personal data as defined in Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (GDPR).

F.17 LEI eligibility

The issuer should be eligible for a Legal Entity Identifier (LEI).

F.18 Home Member State

Germany

F.19 Host Member States

Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden

Part G – Information on the rights and obligations attached to the crypto-assets

G.1 Purchaser rights and obligations

The crypto-asset does not grant any legally enforceable or contractual rights or obligations to its holders or purchasers.

Any functionalities accessible through the underlying technology are of a purely technical or operational nature and do not constitute rights comparable to ownership, profit participation, governance, or similar entitlements known from traditional financial instruments.

Accordingly, holders do not acquire any claim capable of legal enforcement against the issuer or any third party.

G.2 Exercise of rights and obligations

As the crypto-asset does not establish any legally enforceable rights or obligations, there are no applicable procedures or conditions for their exercise.

Any interaction or functionality that may be available within the technical infrastructure of the project – such as participation mechanisms or protocol-level features – serves operational purposes only and does not create or constitute evidence of any contractual or statutory entitlement.

G.3 Conditions for modifications of rights and obligations

As the crypto-asset does not confer any legally enforceable rights or obligations, there are no conditions or mechanisms under which such rights could be modified.

Adjustments to the technical protocol, smart contract logic, or related systems may occur in the ordinary course of development or maintenance.

Such changes do not alter the legal position of holders, as no contractual or regulatory rights exist. Holders should not interpret technical updates or governance-related changes as amendments to legally binding entitlements.

G.4 Future public offers

Information on the future offers to the public of crypto-assets were not available at the time of writing this white paper (2026-01-08).

G.5 Issuer retained crypto-assets

Publicly available tokenomics disclosures indicate that, at the time of the initial distribution of APT, a significant portion of the initially issued units was allocated to categories associated with ecosystem-related purposes, foundations or foundation-like structures, core contributors, and early investors. These allocations were implemented as part of the initial distribution framework and were subject to predefined vesting and lock-up arrangements.

However, these retained or project-associated allocations do not constitute issuer-retained crypto-assets in the classical sense, as no identifiable issuer within the meaning of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 (MiCAR) can be clearly determined for the APT crypto-asset. There is no single legal entity exercising ongoing control over the protocol or holding crypto-assets in a capacity comparable to that of a traditional issuer.

Nevertheless, the concentration of APT holdings linked to early project participants, foundation-related structures, or ecosystem-associated addresses may give rise to distribution- and concentration-related risks for market participants, including potential impacts on liquidity, governance dynamics, or market behaviour as vesting or release milestones are reached.

The exact number of APT units that may be considered retained by such persons or structures cannot be determined with precision on the basis of publicly available information alone. Due to the limited and formal scope of this field, which focuses on issuer-retained crypto-assets rather than a comprehensive analysis of project-associated allocations, the number of issuer-retained crypto-assets is therefore considered not applicable.

G.6 Utility token classification

No – the crypto-asset project does not concern utility tokens as defined in Article 3(9) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114.

G.7 Key features of goods/services of utility tokens

Not applicable, as the crypto-asset described herein is not a utility token.

G.8 Utility tokens redemption

Not applicable, as the crypto-asset described herein is not a utility token.

G.9 Non-trading request

The admission to trading is sought.

G.10 Crypto-assets purchase or sale modalities

Not applicable, as this white paper is written to seek admission to trading, not for the initial offer to the public.

G.11 Crypto-assets transfer restrictions

The crypto-assets themselves are not subject to any technical or contractual transfer restrictions and are generally freely transferable. However, crypto-asset service providers may impose restrictions on buyers or sellers in accordance with applicable laws, internal policies or contractual terms agreed with their clients.

G.12 Supply adjustment protocols

As of the date of drafting, the Aptos protocol does not include protocol-level mechanisms that dynamically increase or decrease the supply of APT in direct response to changes in market demand or price signals. The protocol does not implement discretionary, algorithmic, or demand-responsive supply adjustment mechanisms.

G.13 Supply adjustment mechanisms

Although the Aptos protocol does not implement demand-responsive supply adjustment protocols, it includes protocol-defined mechanisms that affect the total and circulating supply of APT over time.

According to publicly available tokenomics disclosures, new APT units may be issued through staking reward mechanisms associated with the proof-of-stake consensus process. Validators and token holders who delegate APT for staking purposes may receive rewards in newly issued APT, with reward levels determined by protocol parameters. The maximum staking reward rate is defined at the protocol level and is subject to periodic evaluation, with a predefined long-term declining schedule toward a lower bound. These reward mechanisms increase the total supply of APT but operate independently of market demand.

In parallel, the Aptos protocol provides that transaction fees are currently burned, resulting in the permanent removal of APT units from circulation. This mechanism may reduce the circulating supply but is not designed to respond dynamically to demand conditions. Public documentation indicates that fee-burning parameters may be subject to modification through on-chain governance processes.

All emission rates, reward parameters, and fee-related mechanisms are governed by protocol rules and may be modified through decentralised governance. These mechanisms do not constitute automated supply expansion or contraction in response to market demand, but rather predefined and governance-modifiable processes affecting supply over time.

G.14 Token value protection schemes

No – the crypto-asset does not have any mechanisms or schemes in place that aim to stabilise or protect its market value. Its value is determined solely by market supply and demand, and may be subject to significant volatility.

G.15 Token value protection schemes description

Not applicable, as the crypto-asset in scope does not have any value protection scheme in place.

G.16 Compensation schemes

No – the crypto-asset does not have any compensation scheme.

G.17 Compensation schemes description

Not applicable, as the crypto-asset in scope does not have any compensation scheme in place.

G.18 Applicable law

This white paper is submitted in the context of an application for admission to trading on a trading platform established in the European Union. Accordingly, this white paper shall be governed by the laws of the Federal Republic of Germany.

G.19 Competent court

Any disputes arising in relation to this white paper or the admission to trading may fall under the jurisdiction of the competent courts in Hamburg, Germany.

Part H – information on the underlying technology

H.1 Distributed ledger technology (DTL)

The crypto-asset in scope is implemented on the Aptos network following the standards described below.

H.2 Protocols and technical standards

The crypto asset that is the subject of this white paper is available on the Aptos network.

The following applies to Aptos:

The Aptos blockchain operates on publicly documented protocol specifications that define ledger structure, transaction processing, and validation rules. The protocol is implemented in open-source software, and nodes communicate using peer-to-peer networking standards defined in the protocol documentation.

Protocol updates are implemented through software changes adopted by network participants in accordance with governance processes.

H.3 Technology used

The crypto asset that is the subject of this white paper is available on the Aptos network.

The following applies to Aptos:

The network is based on distributed ledger technology that records transactions in blocks linked sequentially. Cryptographic methods are used to secure transactions, manage accounts, and verify authenticity.

Smart contracts are executed within a virtual machine environment based on the Move programming language. Account access is controlled through cryptographic key pairs, and ledger data is replicated across participating nodes.

H.4 Consensus mechanism

The crypto asset that is the subject of this white paper is available on the Aptos network.

The following applies to Aptos:

The Aptos blockchain utilises a proof-of-stake-based consensus mechanism. Validators participate in block proposal and validation in accordance with protocol-defined rules.

Validator selection, participation, and block finalisation are governed by staking and consensus parameters defined at the protocol level, which may be modified through governance processes.

H.5 Incentive mechanisms and applicable fees

The crypto asset that is the subject of this white paper is available on the Aptos network.

The following applies to Aptos:

The protocol includes incentive mechanisms for validators participating in transaction validation and consensus activities. Validators may receive protocol-defined rewards in the form of newly issued APT units.

Transactions consume protocol-defined resources and may require the payment of fees denominated in APT. Fee levels and reward parameters are set by protocol rules and may be adjusted through governance mechanisms.

H.6 Use of distributed ledger technology

No – DLT is not operated by the issuer, the offeror, the person seeking admission to trading, or any third-party acting on their behalf.

H.7 DLT functionality description

Not applicable.

H.8 Audit

As the term “technology” encompasses a broad range of components, it cannot be confirmed that all elements or aspects of the technology employed have undergone a comprehensive and systematic technical examination. Accordingly, the answer to whether an audit of the technology used has been conducted must be no. This white paper focuses primarily on risk-related aspects and therefore does not imply, nor should it be interpreted as implying, that a full assessment or audit of all technological elements has been conducted.

H.9 Audit outcome

Not applicable, as no comprehensive audit of the technology used has been conducted or can be confirmed.

Part I – Information on risks

I.1 Offer-related risks

1. Regulatory and Compliance

Regulatory frameworks applicable to crypto-asset services in the European Union and in third countries are evolving. Supervisory authorities may introduce, interpret, or enforce rules that affect (i) the eligibility of this crypto-asset for admission to trading, (ii) the conditions under which a crypto-asset service provider may offer trading, custody, or transfer services for it, or (iii) the persons or jurisdictions to which such services may be provided. As a result, the crypto-asset service provider admitting this crypto-asset to trading may be required to suspend, restrict, or terminate trading or withdrawals for regulatory reasons, even if the crypto-asset itself continues to function on its underlying network.

2. Trading venue and connection risk

Trading in the crypto-asset depends on the uninterrupted operation of the trading platform admitting it and, where applicable, on its technical connections to external liquidity sources or venues. Interruptions such as system downtime, maintenance, faulty integrations, API changes, or failures at an external venue can temporarily prevent order placement, execution, deposits, or withdrawals, even when the underlying blockchain is functioning. In addition, trading platforms in emerging markets may operate under differing governance, compliance, and oversight standards, which can increase the risk of operational failures or disorderly market conditions.

3. Market formation and liquidity conditions

The price and tradability of the crypto-asset depend on actual trading activity on the venues to which the service provider is connected, whether centralized exchanges (CEXs) or decentralized exchanges (DEXs). Trading volumes may at times be low, order books thin, or liquidity concentrated on a single venue. In such conditions, buy or sell orders may not be executed in full or may be executed only at a less favorable price, resulting in slippage.

Volatility: The market price of the crypto-asset may fluctuate significantly over short periods, including for reasons that are not linked to changes in the underlying project or protocol. Periods of limited liquidity, shifts in overall market sentiment, or trading on only a small number of CEXs or DEXs can amplify these movements and lead to higher slippage when orders are executed. As a result, investors may be unable to sell the crypto-asset at or close to a previously observed price, even though no negative project-specific event has occurred.

4. Counterparty and service-provider dependence

The admission of the crypto-asset to trading may rely on several external parties, such as connected centralized or decentralized trading venues, liquidity providers, brokers, custodians, or technical integrators. If any of these counterparties fail to perform, suspend their services, or apply internal restrictions, the trading, deposit, or withdrawal of the crypto-asset on the admitting service provider can be interrupted or halted.

Quality of counterparties: Trading venues and service providers in certain jurisdictions may operate under regulatory or supervisory standards that are lower or differently enforced than those applicable in the European Union. In such environments, deficiencies in governance, risk management, or compliance may remain undetected, which increases the probability of abrupt service interruptions, investigations, or forced wind-downs.

Delisting and service suspension: The crypto-asset’s availability may depend on the internal listing decisions of these counterparties. A delisting or suspension on a key connected venue can materially reduce liquidity or make trading temporarily impossible on the admitting service provider, even if the underlying crypto-asset continues to function.

Insolvency of counterparties: If a counterparty involved in holding, routing, or settling the crypto-asset becomes insolvent, enters restructuring, or is otherwise subject to resolution-type measures, assets held or processed by that counterparty may be frozen, become temporarily unavailable, or be recoverable only in part or not at all, which can result in losses for clients whose positions were maintained through that counterparty. This risk applies in particular where client assets are held on an omnibus basis or where segregation is not fully recognized in the counterparty’s jurisdiction.

5. Operational and information risks

Due to the irrevocability of blockchain transactions, incorrect approvals or the use of wrong networks or addresses will typically make the transferred funds irrecoverable. Because trading may also rely on technical connections to other venues or service providers, downtime or faulty code in these connections can temporarily block trading, deposits, or withdrawals even when the underlying blockchain is functioning. In addition, different groups of market participants may have unequal access to technical, governance, or project-related information, which can lead to information asymmetry and place less informed investors at a disadvantage when making trading decisions.

6. Market access and liquidity concentration risk

If the crypto-asset is only available on a limited number of trading platforms or through a single market-making entity, this may result in reduced liquidity, greater price volatility, or periods of inaccessibility for retail holders.

I.2 Issuer-related risks

1. Insolvency of the issuer

As with any commercial entity, the issuer may face insolvency risks. These may result from insufficient funding, low market interest, mismanagement, or external shocks (e.g. pandemics, wars). In such a case, ongoing development, support, and governance of the project may cease, potentially affecting the viability and tradability of the crypto-asset.

2. Legal and regulatory risks

The issuer operates in a dynamic and evolving regulatory environment. Failure to comply with applicable laws or regulations in relevant jurisdictions may result in enforcement actions, penalties, or restrictions on the project’s operations. These may negatively impact the crypto-asset’s availability, market acceptance, or legal status.

3. Operational risks

The issuer may fail to implement adequate internal controls, risk management, or governance processes. This can result in operational disruptions, financial losses, delays in updating the white paper, or reputational damage.

4. Governance and decision-making

The issuer’s management body is responsible for key strategic, operational, and disclosure decisions. Ineffective governance, delays in decision-making, or lack of resources may compromise the stability of the project and its compliance with MiCA requirements. High concentration of decision-making authority or changes in ownership/control can amplify these risks.

5. Reputational risks

The issuer’s reputation may be harmed by internal failures, external accusations, or association with illicit activity. Negative publicity can reduce trust in the issuer and impact the perceived legitimacy or value of the crypto-asset.

6. Counterparty dependence

The issuer may depend on third-party providers for certain core functions, such as technology development, marketing, legal advice, or infrastructure. If these partners discontinue their services, change ownership, or underperform, the issuer’s ability to operate the project or maintain investor communication may be impaired. This could disrupt project continuity or undermine market confidence, ultimately affecting the crypto-asset’s value.

I.3 Crypto-assets-related risks

1. Valuation risk

The crypto-asset does not represent a claim, nor is it backed by physical assets or legal entitlements. Its market value is driven solely by supply and demand dynamics and may fluctuate significantly. In the absence of fundamental value anchors, such assets can lose their entire market value within a very short time. Historical market behaviour has shown that some types of crypto-assets – such as meme coins or purely speculative tokens – have become worthless. Investors should be aware that this crypto-asset may lose all of its value.

2. Market volatility risk

Crypto-asset prices can fluctuate sharply due to changes in market sentiment, macroeconomic conditions, regulatory developments, or technology trends. Such volatility may result in rapid and significant losses. Holders should be prepared for the possibility of losing the full amount invested.

3. Liquidity and price-determination risk

Low trading volumes, fragmented trading across venues, or the absence of active market makers can restrict the ability to buy or sell the crypto-asset. In such situations, it is not guaranteed that an observable market price will exist at all times. Spreads may widen materially, and orders may only be executable under unfavourable conditions, which can make liquidation costly or temporarily impossible.

4. Asset security risk

Loss or theft of private keys, unauthorised access to wallets, or failures of custodial or exchange service providers can result in the irreversible loss of assets. Because blockchain transactions are final, recovery of funds after a compromise is generally impossible.

5. Fraud and scam risk

The pseudonymous and irreversible nature of blockchain transactions can attract fraudulent schemes. Typical forms include fake or unauthorised crypto-assets imitating established ones, phishing attempts, deceptive airdrops, or social-engineering attacks. Investors should exercise caution and verify the authenticity of counterparties and information sources.

6. Legal and regulatory reclassification risk

Legislative or regulatory changes in the European Union or in the Member State where the crypto-asset is admitted to trading may alter its legal classification, permitted uses, or tradability. In third countries, the crypto-asset may be treated as a financial instrument or security, which can restrict its offering, trading, or custody.

7. Absence of investor protection

The crypto-asset is not covered by investor-compensation or deposit-guarantee schemes. In the event of loss, fraud, or insolvency of a service provider, holders may have no access to recourse mechanisms typically available in regulated financial markets.

8. Counterparty risk

Reliance on third-party exchanges, custodians, or intermediaries exposes holders to operational failures, insolvency, or fraud of these parties. Investors should conduct due diligence on service providers, as their failure may lead to the partial or total loss of held assets.

9. Reputational risk

Negative publicity related to security incidents, misuse of blockchain technology, or associations with illicit activity can damage public confidence and reduce the crypto-asset’s market value.

10. Community and sentiment risk

Because the crypto-asset’s perceived relevance and expected future use depend largely on community engagement and the prevailing sentiment, a loss of public interest, negative coverage or reduced activity of key contributors can materially reduce market demand.

11. Macroeconomic and interest-rate risk

Fluctuations in interest rates, exchange rates, general market conditions, or overall market volatility can influence investor sentiment towards digital assets and affect the crypto-asset’s market value.

12. Taxation risk

Tax treatment varies across jurisdictions. Holders are individually responsible for complying with all applicable tax laws, including the reporting and payment of taxes arising from the acquisition, holding, or disposal of the crypto-asset.

13. Anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorist-financing risk

Wallet addresses or transactions connected to the crypto-asset may be linked to sanctioned or illicit activity. Regulatory responses to such findings may include transfer restrictions, report obligations, or the freezing of assets on certain venues.

14. Market-abuse risk

Due to limited oversight and transparency, crypto-assets may be vulnerable to market-abuse practices such as spoofing, pump-and-dump schemes, or insider trading. Such activities can distort prices and expose holders to sudden losses.

15. Legal ownership and jurisdictional risk

Depending on the applicable law, holders of the crypto-asset may not have enforceable ownership rights or effective legal remedies in cases of disputes, fraud, or service failure. In certain jurisdictions, access to exchanges or interfaces may be restricted by regulatory measures, even if on-chain transfer remains technically possible.

16. Concentration risk

A large proportion of the total supply may be held by a small number of holders. This can enable market manipulation, governance dominance, or sudden large-scale liquidations that adversely affect market stability, price levels, and investor confidence.

I.4 Project implementation-related risks

As this white paper relates to the admission to trading of the crypto-asset, the following risk description reflects general implementation risks on the crypto-asset service provider's side typically associated with crypto-asset projects. The party admitting the asset to trading is not involved in the project’s implementation and does not assume responsibility for its governance, funding, or execution.

Delays, failures, or changes in the implementation of the project as outlined in its public roadmap or technical documentation may negatively impact the perceived credibility or usability of the crypto-asset. This includes risks related to project governance, resource allocation, technical delivery, and team continuity.

Key-person risk: The project may rely on a limited number of individuals for development, maintenance, or strategic direction. The departure, incapacity, or misalignment of these individuals may delay or derail the implementation.

Timeline and milestone risk: Project milestones may not be met as announced. Delays in feature releases, protocol upgrades, or external integrations can undermine market confidence and affect the adoption, use, or value of the crypto-asset.

Delivery risk: Even if implemented on time, certain functionalities or integrations may not perform as intended or may be scaled back during execution, limiting the token’s practical utility.

I.5 Technology-related risks

As this white paper relates to the admission to trading of the crypto-asset, the following risks concern the underlying distributed ledger technology (DLT), its supporting infrastructure, and related technical dependencies. Failures or vulnerabilities in these systems may affect the availability, integrity, or transferability of the crypto-asset.

1. Blockchain dependency risk

The functionality of the crypto-asset depends on the continuous and stable operation of the blockchain(s) on which it is issued. Network congestion, outages, or protocol errors may temporarily or permanently disrupt on-chain transactions. Extended downtime or degradation in network performance can affect trading, settlement, or usability of the crypto-asset.

2. Smart contract vulnerability risk

The smart contract that defines the crypto-asset’s parameters or governs its transfers may contain coding errors or security vulnerabilities. Exploitation of such weaknesses can result in unintended token minting, permanent loss of funds, or disruption of token functionality. Even after external audits, undetected vulnerabilities may persist due to the immutable nature of deployed code.

3. Wallet and key-management risk

The custody of crypto-assets relies on secure private key management. Loss, theft, or compromise of private keys results in irreversible loss of access. Custodians, trading venues, or wallet providers may be targeted by cyberattacks. Compatibility issues between wallet software and changes to the blockchain protocol (e.g. network upgrades) can further limit user access or the ability to transfer the crypto-asset.

Outdated or vulnerable wallet software:

Users relying on outdated, unaudited, or unsupported wallet software may face compatibility issues, security vulnerabilities, or failures when interacting with the blockchain. Failure to update wallet software in line with protocol developments can result in transaction errors, loss of access, or exposure to known exploits.

4. Network security risks

Attack Risks: Blockchains may be subject to denial-of-service (DoS) attacks, 51% attacks, or other exploits targeting the consensus mechanism. These can delay transactions, compromise finality, or disrupt the accurate recording of transfers.

Centralization Concerns: Despite claims of decentralisation, a relatively small number of validators or a high concentration of stake may increase the risk of collusion, censorship, or coordinated network downtime, which can affect the resilience and operational reliability of the crypto-asset.

5. Bridge and interoperability risk

Where tokens can be bridged or wrapped across multiple blockchains, vulnerabilities in bridge protocols, validator sets, or locking mechanisms may result in loss, duplication, or misrepresentation of assets. Exploits or technical failures in these systems can instantly impact circulating supply, ownership claims, or token fungibility across chains.

6. Forking and protocol-upgrade risk

Network upgrades or disagreements among node operators or validators can result in blockchain “forks”, where the blockchain splits into two or more incompatible versions that continue separately from a shared past. This may lead to duplicate token representations or incompatibilities between exchanges and wallets. Until consensus stabilises, trading or transfers may be disrupted or misaligned. Such situations may be difficult for retail holders to navigate, particularly when trading platforms or wallets display inconsistent token information.

7. Economic-layer and abstraction risk

Mechanisms such as gas relayers, wrapped tokens, or synthetic representations may alter the transaction economics of the underlying token. Changes in transaction costs, token demand, or utility may reduce its usage and weaken both its economic function and perceived value within its ecosystem.

8. Spam and network-efficiency risk

High volumes of low-value (“dust”) or automated transactions may congest the network, slow validation times, inflate ledger size, and raise transaction costs. This can impair performance, reduce throughput, and expose address patterns to analysis, thereby reducing network efficiency and privacy.

9. Front-end and access-interface risk

If users rely on centralised web interfaces or hosted wallets to interact with the blockchain, service outages, malicious compromises, or domain expiries affecting these interfaces may block access to the crypto-asset, even while the blockchain itself remains fully functional. Dependence on single web portals introduces a critical point of failure outside the DLT layer.

10. Decentralisation claim risk

While the technical infrastructure may appear distributed, the actual governance or economic control of the project may lie with a small set of actors. This disconnect between marketing claims and structural reality can lead to regulatory scrutiny, reputational damage, or legal uncertainty – especially if the project is presented as ‘community-governed’ without substantiation.

I.6 Mitigation measures

None.

Part J – Information on the sustainability indicators in relation to adverse impact on the climate and other environment-related adverse impacts

J.1 Adverse impacts on climate and other environment-related adverse impacts

S.1 Name

Crypto Risk Metrics GmbH

S.2 Relevant legal entity identifier

39120077M9TG0O1FE242

S.3 Name of the cryptoasset

Aptos Coin

S.4 Consensus Mechanism

The crypto asset that is the subject of this white paper is available on the Aptos network.

The following applies to Aptos:

The Aptos blockchain utilises a proof-of-stake-based consensus mechanism. Validators participate in block proposal and validation in accordance with protocol-defined rules.

Validator selection, participation, and block finalisation are governed by staking and consensus parameters defined at the protocol level, which may be modified through governance processes.

S.5 Incentive Mechanisms and Applicable Fees

The crypto asset that is the subject of this white paper is available on the Aptos network.

The following applies to Aptos:

The protocol includes incentive mechanisms for validators participating in transaction validation and consensus activities. Validators may receive protocol-defined rewards in the form of newly issued APT units.

Transactions consume protocol-defined resources and may require the payment of fees denominated in APT. Fee levels and reward parameters are set by protocol rules and may be adjusted through governance mechanisms.

S.6 Beginning of the period to which the disclosure relates

2025-01-18

S.7 End of the period to which the disclosure relates

2026-01-18

S.8 Energy consumption

262800.00000 kWh/a

S.9 Energy consumption sources and methodologies

The energy consumption of this asset is aggregated across multiple components: For the calculation of energy consumptions, the so called 'bottom-up' approach is being used. The nodes are considered to be the central factor for the energy consumption of the network. These assumptions are made on the basis of empirical findings through the use of public information sites, open-source crawlers and crawlers developed in-house. The main determinants for estimating the hardware used within the network are the requirements for operating the client software. The energy consumption of the hardware devices was measured in certified test laboratories. When calculating the energy consumption, we used - if available - the Functionally Fungible Group Digital Token Identifier (FFG DTI) to determine all implementations of the asset of question in scope and we update the mappings regularly, based on data of the Digital Token Identifier Foundation. The information regarding the hardware used and the number of participants in the network is based on assumptions that are verified with best effort using empirical data. In general, participants are assumed to be largely economically rational. As a precautionary principle, we make assumptions on the conservative side when in doubt, i.e. making higher estimates for the adverse impacts.

S.10 Renewable energy consumption

31.3817462059 %

S.11 Energy intensity

0.00011 kWh

S.12 Scope 1 DLT GHG emissions – Controlled

0.00000 tCO2e/a

S.13 Scope 2 DLT GHG emissions – Purchased

87.46328 tCO2e/a

S.14 GHG intensity

0.00005 kgCO2e

S.15 Key energy sources and methodologies

To determine the proportion of renewable energy usage, the locations of the nodes are to be determined using public information sites, open-source crawlers and crawlers developed in-house. If no information is available on the geographic distribution of the nodes, reference networks are used which are comparable in terms of their incentivization structure and consensus mechanism. This geo-information is merged with public information from Our World in Data, see citation. The intensity is calculated as the marginal energy cost wrt. one more transaction. Ember (2025); Energy Institute - Statistical Review of World Energy (2024) - with major processing by Our World in Data. “Share of electricity generated by renewables - Ember and Energy Institute” [dataset]. Ember, “Yearly Electricity Data Europe”; Ember, “Yearly Electricity Data”; Energy Institute, “Statistical Review of World Energy” [original data]. Retrieved from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-electricity-renewables.

S.16 Key GHG sources and methodologies

To determine the GHG Emissions, the locations of the nodes are to be determined using public information sites, open-source crawlers and crawlers developed in-house. If no information is available on the geographic distribution of the nodes, reference networks are used which are comparable in terms of their incentivization structure and consensus mechanism. This geo-information is merged with public information from Our World in Data, see citation. The intensity is calculated as the marginal emission wrt. one more transaction. Ember (2025); Energy Institute - Statistical Review of World Energy (2024) - with major processing by Our World in Data. “Carbon intensity of electricity generation - Ember and Energy Institute” [dataset]. Ember, “Yearly Electricity Data Europe”; Ember, “Yearly Electricity Data”; Energy Institute, “Statistical Review of World Energy” [original data]. Retrieved from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/carbon-intensity-electricity Licenced under CC BY 4.0.