Bangkok Post

PayPal welcomes cryptocurr­encies

-

LONDON: PayPal Holdings Inc said on Wednesday it would allow customers to hold Bitcoin and other virtual coins in its online wallet and shop using cryptocurr­encies at the 26 million merchants on its network.

The new service makes PayPal one of the largest US companies to provide consumers access to cryptocurr­encies, which could help bitcoin and rival cryptocurr­encies gain wider adoption as viable payment methods.

“The San Jose, California-based company hopes the service will encourage global use of virtual coins and prepare its network for new digital currencies that central banks and companies may develop,’’ president and CEO Dan Schulman said in an interview.

“We are working with central banks and thinking of all forms of digital currencies and how PayPal can play a role,” he said.

“US account holders will be able to buy, sell and hold cryptocurr­encies in their PayPal wallets over the coming weeks,’’ the company said.

PayPal plans to expand the service to its peer-to-peer payment app Venmo and some other countries in the first half of 2021.

“The ability to make payments with cryptocurr­encies will be available from early next year,’’ the company said.

Other mainstream fintech companies, such as mobile payments provider Square Inc and stock trading app firm Robinhood Markets Inc, allow users to buy and sell cryptocurr­encies, but PayPal’s launch is noteworthy given its size.

The company has 346 million active accounts around the world and processed $222 billion in payments in the second quarter.

Bitcoin hit its highest since July 2019 on the news. It was last up 4.8% at $12,494, taking gains for the original and biggest cryptocurr­ency above 75% for the year.

Cryptocurr­ency market players said the size of PayPal meant the move would be a plus for bitcoin prices.

“The price impact will be positive overall,” Joseph Edwards of Enigma Securities, a cryptocurr­ency brokerage in London, said. “There’s no comparison with regards to the potential exposure between the upside of PayPal offering this, and the upside of any similar previous offering.”

PayPal’s service comes as some central banks have announced plans to develop digital versions of their currencies, following a Facebook-led cryptocurr­ency project Libra in 2019, which was met by strong regulatory pushback.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The PayPal app logo seen on a mobile phone in this illustrati­on photo.
REUTERS The PayPal app logo seen on a mobile phone in this illustrati­on photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand