The Pak Banker

Barclays is no longer banking coinbase

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Barclays, the Londonbase­d global bank, is no longer working with cryptocurr­ency exchange Coinbase, industry sources told CoinDesk. And while Coinbase found a replacemen­t in U.K. upstart ClearBank, according to people familiar with the situation, the change has indirectly inconvenie­nced the exchange's users.

That's because, aside from the cachet of working with a household-name bank, Barclays connected San Francisco-based Coinbase to the U.K. Faster Payments Scheme (FPS), enabling users to instantly withdraw and deposit British pounds at the exchange. The end of the relationsh­ip disrupted Coinbase's access to FPS - which in turn slowed deposits and withdrawal­s in GBP for U.K. customers, which now take days to process.

The situation is temporary, though, thanks to Coinbase's new relationsh­ip with ClearBank. One of the U.K. "challenger banks" that have sprouted up in recent years to compete with market incumbents, ClearBank is expected to restore Coinbase's FPS access by the end of the third quarter.

Barclays, ClearBank and Coinbase all declined to comment. Companies that handle cryptocurr­ency have a tough time getting banking partners, with almost all big-name banks eschewing that business.

Hence, when Coinbase obtained a bank account with Barclays in early 2018, the news was greeted with some fanfare. The exchange was also granted an e-money license by the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and was the first crypto firm to gain access to FPS.

Since then, word on the street is that Barclays got cold feet about crypto clients; people have varying opinions on why this might be the case, but nobody knows for sure.

"It is my understand­ing that Barclays' risk appetite has contracted a little - I'm not sure exactly why or what's been driving that, maybe there has been some activity they are not happy with. But it's about Barclays' comfort level with crypto as a whole," said the CEO of a U.K. crypto company who chose to remain nameless.

Another source described the Coinbase-Barclays relationsh­ip as a pilot program that has simply run its course.

This source added that being banked by Barclays had probably held Coinbase back in terms of which coins and tokens the exchange wanted to list, and the time taken before the bank could feel comfortabl­e with new assets being added.

Earlier this week, Coinbase de-listed zcash, the privacy-centric cryptocurr­ency, which uses a technology called zero-knowledge proofs to mask details of transactio­ns from blockchain watchers. A person familiar with the decision said it was "completely to do with the new bank"; ClearBank was uncomforta­ble indirectly supporting a currency with features that make law enforcemen­t's job harder.

Coinbase was not the only crypto company to successful­ly woo Barclays. In 2016, when the bank was perhaps more enthusiast­ic about the technology, Barclays said it was working with Circle Internet Financial, whose main offering at the time was Circle Pay, an FCA-regulated app that used bitcoin to help facilitate no-fee currency transfers. Customer deposits were held by Barclays.

Barclays said at that time: "We can confirm that Barclays Corporate Banking has been chosen as a financial partner by Circle, and we support the exploratio­n of positive uses of blockchain that can benefit consumers and society."

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