Arab Times

Bitcoin start-ups in Asia take aim at remittance­s market

Low liquidity on exchanges, unclear regulation­s prevent scaling

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KONG/SEOUL, March 13, (RTRS): Bitcoin, battered by warnings about volatility and bubble-like appreciati­on, may have found a way to play a niche role in a big market: overseas money transfers.

Used as a transfer mechanism rather than a currency, bitcoin circumvent­s banks’ transactio­n fees.

Start-ups such as Bitspark in Hong Kong, and Bloom, Payphil, coins.ph and Satoshi Citadel Industries’ (SCI) remittance unit Rebit in Philippine­s, are trying to turn that into a business model.

Reduced liquidity on cryptocurr­ency exchanges and regulatory uncertaint­y are, for now, limiting monthly bitcoinbas­ed remittance­s to millions of dollars in a multibilli­on-dollar market, the start-ups say.

But if cryptocurr­encies mature, they say, traditiona­l businesses will be in for some serious disruption.

“Bitcoin is so much better as a mechanism to send money around the world,” said George Harrap, chief executive of Bitspark, a company that performs transfers for dozens of remittance shops in Hong Kong, Philippine­s, Indonesia, Vietnam, Pakistan, Nigeria and Ghana. “There’s a lot less overhead that you need to do.”

Many of the start-ups, such as Bitspark, do not deal directly with individual customers, but instead provide the “back end” transfer mechanism for remittance shops.

The businesses estimate how much money they will need for a day, buy bitcoin in advance and immediatel­y sell it for the currency in the receiving country. That means they do not hold cryptocurr­ency for any meaningful length of time, and customers’ transactio­ns are resolved in minutes, rather than days.

Kate Corporal, 28, a Filipina working at an internatio­nal company in Incheon, South Korea, said she saved “huge” amounts sending money home using Rebit compared with traditiona­l services.

“One thing I can guarantee is that the money I intended to send and the money that my family received was exactly the same,” Corporal said. “Using bitcoin is really helpful for many Filipinos ... as every single cent that we send can be very significan­t.”

Reduced demand for cryptocurr­encies in smaller economies often means bitcoin prices are lower, so sending $100 to Indonesia or the Philippine­s via bitcoin results in the equivalent of more than $100 at the other end. Without the bank fees, the shops say they can charge their customers 25 to 75 percent less.

But the model has little to no advantage in markets with larger Filipino communitie­s such as Hong Kong and Singapore, where competitio­n is high and fees are low — roughly 1-2 percent, compared with 10-15 percent in South Korea.

Rebit sends money to Philippine­s mainly from South Korea, Japan and Canada and is looking to expand to the Middle East.

The giants Western Union and Moneygram, which dominate the current market, are testing Ripple’s XRP, a cryptocurr­ency smaller and more centralise­d than bitcoin.

But the industry’s transforma­tion does not appear imminent.

The value of all bitcoin held globally is about $160 billion, roughly twothirds of the Asian remittance market and a third of the global one, according to World Bank estimates. That means local cryptocurr­ency exchanges cannot cope with the cash flow needs of larger businesses.

“As soon as you’re doing $10-15 million a day, liquidity becomes an issue and you’re wondering, ‘how am I going to do this,’” said Prajit Nanu, chief executive and co-founder of InstaReM, which remits money to over 60 countries.

The start-ups avoid holding bitcoin for more than a few minutes because of its volatility.

Bitcoin now trades around $10,000, 10 times higher than a year ago, but half its December peak — a common swing for the emerging asset class.

“We started in 2014, when bitcoin crashed from $1,000 to $200-$300 and luckily our business model didn’t rely on speculatio­n,” said SCI co-founder Miguel Cuneta.

“We are merely using it as a transfer mechanism,” he added. “We convert it as soon as possible.”

Cuneta says Rebit was only approved by Philippine’s central bank last year. South Korea’s backing away from banning cryptocurr­ency trading was encouragin­g, he said, but more clarity was needed in Seoul and elsewhere.

In Singapore, start-up Toast gave up using bitcoin for remittance­s so it could get licensed. It is now transferri­ng money the traditiona­l way but plans to offer loans and insurance using blockchain technology and smart contracts — a product offered by bitcoin’s main rival Ether and others.

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