Albuquerque Journal

Facebook, 20 other companies launch Libra

Cryptocurr­ency has seen a series of high-level defections

- BY REX CRUM THE MERCURY NEWS

Despite mounting skepticism and the lack of support from several leading financial companies, Facebook and 20 other companies have launched the Libra Council, a group designed to support and govern the already controvers­ial Libra cryptocurr­ency.

In addition to Facebook, which is joining the council via its Calibra subsidiary, the group’s founding members include Uber, Lyft, Spotify, European telecom giant Vodafone and Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreesen Horowitz. The group will be overseen by a fivemember board of directors that includes David Marcus, Facebook’s Libra project leader.

The organizati­on held its first meeting in Geneva, and tried to play up a sense of wide business interest in supporting Libra. The associatio­n said that 180 “entities” have met the preliminar­y requiremen­ts for group membership and that 1,500 more have expressed interest in joining the group.

Such numbers, if true, would go a ways toward shoring up the public image of Libra, which has been hit by a series of high-level defections and widespread government­al concerns about the status of Libra in the global currency system.

In order to boost support for Libra in the United States, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg will go to Washington next week to testify about the cryptocurr­ency before the House Financial Services Committee.

Libra originally planned on having 28 members at the launch of the associatio­n, but in less than two weeks, PayPal, eBay, Visa, MasterCard, financial technology startup Stripe and online hotelreser­vation company Booking Holdings all dropped their support for the cryptocurr­ency due to uncertaint­y about how Libra will be managed and used.

Libra has meet considerab­le resistance in Europe, in particular, where finance ministers from France and Germany have said they will not support the launch or use of Libra in Europe. A taskforce of financial officials from the G7 group of world economies was also said to be delivering a report to the meeting of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund this week.

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