Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Cryptocurr­ency trading rebounds

- Neil Borate neil.b@livemint.com ■

MUMBAI: A shift from peer-to-peer to exchange-administer­ed payments has cemented a sharp rise in cryptocurr­ency trading in India since March.

The Supreme Court invalidate­d a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) ban on crypto payments on March 5, allowing banks to do business with crypto exchanges. These exchanges resumed rupee transactio­ns, allowing their customers to convert rupees to cryptocurr­encies and vice versa.

The rebound in exchange trading has been accompanie­d by a thaw in mainstream responses to cryptocurr­ency. Earlier this month, in an interview with CNBC, former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan said cryptocurr­encies could play a role in a world in which central banks issue their own cryptocurr­encies. On August 24, the Internatio­nal

Monetary Fund released an educationa­l video on cryptocurr­encies.

Crypto trading took a huge hit when RBI banned crypto-related payments in 2018. Banks stopped providing services to exchanges, preventing them from banking transfers in rupees. This impacted the crucial first and last leg of cryptocurr­ency investment­s in which a trader invests in rupees and books profits in rupees. Exchanges responded by shifting focus to crypto-to-crypto trading and some exchanges like Zebpay moved out of India altogether. However, crypto exchanges also devised peer-topeer systems to get around this problem, in which users connected through an exchange but paid each other directly. But these were clunky and did not inspire much trust.

“It takes time to add beneficiar­ies and transfer money to peoples’ bank accounts. This can be anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours. Most people don’t have the patience to trade like this. Volumes fell 90% when the RBI payments ban came into effect in August 2018,” said Arjun Vijay, co-founder and chief operating officer of Chennai-based Giottus Cryptocurr­ency exchange.

There is also an element of trust involved in disclosing bank account details to third parties and making transfers to unknown accounts.

To be sure, a draft bill banning crypto trading and criminalis­ing even possession of cryptocurr­ency continues to cast a shadow over the industry. However, as the government dithers between a complete ban and a softer regulatory system, more and more ordinary Indians are taking to crypto trading. After crashing to around ₹3.65 lakh per piece in March, bitcoin has surged 2.4 times to ₹8.4 lakh apiece now.

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