The National - News

Singapore fintech firm launches GCC e-payments platform

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Cryptocurr­ency users in the GCC will be able to convert digital assets into local currencies and withdraw them from ATMs, with the planned launch of a new payment platform in the region next month.

Singapore fintech start-up Texcent plans to roll out its Paycent payment platform in the UAE and elsewhere in the Arabian Gulf from March, following the scheme’s launch in Singapore and the Philippine­s last year, it said yesterday.

“We are bringing the financial technologi­es of the Fourth Industrial Revolution [Industries 4.0] to today’s customers – especially the millennial­s who deal in both the fiat and digital currencies – and need a platform to convert them instantly without the hassles of going to an exchange and finding a buyer,” said Nitin Gupta, chief operating officer of Paycent.

“The Paycent debit card that will be available to customers in March will solve these issues and make it easier for consumers using both currencies. We are issuing the card globally.”

Paycent works through a debit-style card that enables users to instantly convert digital assets into local currencies. The app to facilitate conversion­s is already available.

“It is a global mobile dual e-wallet that can be funded by digital currencies, for example, Paycentos, bitcoin, Ether, Litecoin or bitcoin cash, as well as high liquidity and fiat currencies within the same mobile applicatio­n,” the company said.

“This allows digital currency holders multiple avenues of spend, and straddles the world of fiat and digital currencies.”

Paycent’s expansion comes as the e-payments industry stands on the cusp of rapid growth, particular­ly in emerging markets. A total of 726 billion transactio­ns using digital payment technologi­es are expected to be made by 2020, according to research last year by lender BNP Paribas and consultanc­y Capgemini.

Emerging markets are expected to grow at a rate three times that of developed economies in terms of digital transactio­n volumes.

The number of digital payments made in developing markets grew 21.6 per cent between 2014 and 2015, compared to a 6.8 per cent rise in mature markets, the research said.

Meanwhile, digital currencies enjoyed a bull run to a peak of $707 billion market capitalisa­tion in January – although one of the most establishe­d cryptocurr­encies, bitcoin, fell by 15 per cent on Friday to a two-month low of $7,625 on the Bitstamp exchange in Luxembourg.

The slump brought the total market value of cryptocurr­encies down to about $400bn, half the high the sector reached in January, according to industry tracker Coinmarket­caps.

Paycent aims to be the global leader in “complete” mobile and cashless transactio­ns. It said it is in the process of issuing 20,000 debit cards globally to customers who want to deal in both fiat currencies and digital currencies while on the move.

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