CRYPTO COLLECTOR
Kik Interactive is raising money from regular people through an initial coin offering,
Canadian messaging startup Kik Interactive is about to get its biggest cash infusion yet — but this time, much of it will come from regular people instead of venture capitalists.
The Waterloo, Ont.-based firm expects to raise $125 million from an initial coin offering, a process by which it sells tokens that can be used to buy services on its platform.
The idea is that as more people use Kik, the value of those tokens, called Kin, will rise. Kik has already raised $50 million from block-chain-focused investment firms and will release another $75 million worth of tokens Sept. 12 to the general public.
Initial coin offerings, or ICOs, have spread in the past year, raising more than $1.3 billion for dozens of startups. Securities regulators around the world have voiced concerns and the founders of the cryptocurrency software many ICOs are built on have called them a “ticking time bomb.”
Yet people are lining up to throw their money into them. If Kik is successful in raising the $125 million, it will more than double all the venture funding the company has received to date, which includes a $50-million investment in 2015 from Tencent Holdings Ltd. that pushed its valuation to $1 billion.
“With millions of users, Kik hopes to drive mainstream consumer adoption of Kin, potentially making it the most adopted and used cryptocurrency in the world,” the company said in a statement.
The funding will inject capital into a company that has been struggling to compete in the world of messaging, which is dominated by Facebook. Kik revealed earlier this year that of the 300 million people who have registered for the app over the years, only around 15 million still use it on a monthly basis. As a well-established and relatively well-known consumer company, Kik has the opportunity to bring authority to ICOs.
“Kik is by far the largest consumer company to enter the cryptocurrency space,” Ryan Zurrer, a venture partner at Polychain Capital, which invested in Kin, said in the statement. “This is a seminal moment for the industry.”