The National - News

Cryptocurr­ency industry moves closer to the mainstream

Shifting from speculatio­n and store of value to consumer transactio­ns

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

The cryptocurr­ency industry is boosting efforts to make bitcoin and other virtual currencies accepted as forms of payments for goods and services, according to participan­ts at a blockchain conference in Dubai yesterday.

So far, the nascent currencies are only used for speculatio­n and as a store of value, but companies, including Pundi X and Graft, are working on point-ofsales systems that will allow consumers to use cryptocurr­encies, whose combined market value has reached about US$1 trillion, as they would cash in stores and for online.

“Our project is to encourage people to use cryptocurr­encies in the real economy,” Zac Cheah, Jakarta-based chief executive of Pundi X, said at Dubai Internatio­nal Blockchain Summit.

“Say you own three bitcoin. You may want to keep it for three months or three years but what if you want to use your bitcoin. What is the easy way to use bitcoin? I think this real economy usage is very crucial for bitcoin.”

Pundi X raised nearly $35 million in an initial coin offering last year. That subscripti­on is reopening this month to raise about $4m that is needed to close the fundraisin­g round. The company is aiming to produce and sell more than 100,000 point-of-sale machines in the next three years, Mr Cheah said.

While the meteoric rise of cryptocurr­encies like bitcoin has captured the world’s imaginatio­n, it has as many people against it as it has for it. There are those who dismiss its worth, including the billionair­e investor Warren Buffett, saying it is a bubble waiting to burst. Others chide the lack of regulation and use of the digital currency by crime syndicates and money launderers.

Meanwhile, central banks including the Central Bank of the UAE, have been looking at ways to regulate cryptocurr­encies. The banking regulator in the UAE is finishing a review that may result in new regulation­s on the use of digital currencies like bitcoin, a person familiar with the situation said in September.

Portland, Oregan-based Dan Itkis, co-founder of Graft, a cryptocurr­ency and payment network, said that with greater adoption, the volatility of cryptocurr­encies, which often rise or fall by more than 5 per cent on a daily basis, will reduce, as will transactio­n costs.

Those costs on some currencies can make the purchase of everyday items, such as a cup of coffee, pointless when a $30 fee on a $3 cup of coffee is charged.

There are about 200,000 bitcoin transactio­ns a day, 99 per cent of which are done through trades on exchanges, said Mr Iktis, whose company, like Pundit, is also raising funds through an initial coin offering.

“There’s a lot of value locked up in cryptocurr­encies, it’s $1tn in value, and so you need to unlock it somehow,” Mr Itkis said. “The biggest problem with cryptocurr­encies today is the rate of fluctuatio­ns and the only way to solve to that is by injecting more transactio­ns. The more transactio­ns you have, the more liquidity you have.”

While few retailers accept cryptocurr­encies as a form of payment, industry executives say that may soon change as some of the world’s biggest investment banks jump on the bandwagon. Goldman Sachs, the New York investment bank, said last month that it was setting up a cryptocurr­ency trading desk because of increasing interest from clients.

The biggest barrier to growth, however, is that less than 1 per cent of the world’s population owns cryptocurr­encies, Mr Cheah noted.

Point-of-sales systems will allow consumers to use cryptocurr­encies, whose market value has reached about $1tn

 ?? Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Attendees at Dubai Internatio­nal Block Chain Summit 2018 at Atlantis The Palm yesterday
Antonie Robertson / The National Attendees at Dubai Internatio­nal Block Chain Summit 2018 at Atlantis The Palm yesterday

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