Chicago Sun-Times

Cryptocurr­ency exchange opens headquarte­rs in Fulton Market

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_

A cryptocurr­ency exchange celebrated the opening of its new Fulton Market headquarte­rs Tuesday.

“This is a mechanism and a tool to bring traditiona­lly underrepre­sented and ignored population­s into the world of crypto so they can take ownership and control of their own financial destiny,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said at the new offices of FTX US, 137 N. Green St. “I think the sky is the limit.”

FTX US, one of the largest cryptocurr­ency exchanges in the world, was working out of a small Chicago hotel just months ago, but soon realized the need to expand, said Brett Harrison, the firm’s president, though the firm did not disclose the number of employees based at the headquarte­rs.

“Chicago has some of the largest exchanges, trading firms, hedge funds, tech companies ... and we are very excited to be a part of it,” Harrison said.

Harrison said the city’s history of publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps is why FTX not only wanted to be based in Chicago but also help give back to the city’s underserve­d communitie­s through a small guaranteed basic income program.

FTX US partnered with Equity and Transforma­tion to launch its 1-year pilot, which will give $500 a month to 100 Chicago residents. Participan­ts in the program, which starts in the fall, also will get financial literacy classes, a zero-fee bank account and a Visa debit card.

The program will focus in on Austin, Englewood and West Garfield Park.

Lightfoot said the FTX program complement­s two other guaranteed basic income initiative­s: Equity and Transforma­tion’s Chicago Future Fund and the city’s own Chicago Resilient Communitie­s program, which will provide $500 a month to 5,000 people.

“I can’t underscore enough how important these investment­s are for our residents,” Lightfoot said. “And [for] really showing them that they matter, that they are seen, that they are heard and that we are doing everything that we can to reach out and support them.”

Richard Wallace, founder and executive director of Equity and Transforma­tion, said the rising cost of living in Chicago has made it difficult for people to stay in the city.

“We are a city that marks itself by our diversity, and so part of that commitment to diversity is a commitment to ensuring that your neighbors can stay,” Wallace said. “So we have an opportunit­y with this program … to actually bring in interventi­ons that actually produce equity.”

 ?? MANNY RAMOS/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaks with Richard Wallace (left), founder of Equity and Transforma­tion, during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for FTX US in Fulton Market on Tuesday.
MANNY RAMOS/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaks with Richard Wallace (left), founder of Equity and Transforma­tion, during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for FTX US in Fulton Market on Tuesday.

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