Business Standard

Bitcoins are business as usual in Bengaluru

One can pay for food, bus tickets, order stuff or shopping vouchers of companies online and even get a haircut

- ADITI PHADNIS

There is nothing about Indiranaga­r, Bengaluru’s middle class suburb, to suggest subversion might be brewing here. Least of all at the Suryawansh­i restaurant, an open-air dhaba-type establishm­ent, which serves authentic Maharashtr­ian food:

misal-pav, fragrant lavender-coloured sol kadi and

batata vada. You can pay using good ol’ cash, credit card, mobile wallet... and also bitcoin. Suyawanshi reported its first bitcoin transactio­n last month.

“A group of people came. They had a mutton thali, prawn sukka masala, misalpav and some other items. The bill came to around ~1,700. They wanted to pay in bitcoin,” said Prafesh, part owner and server at Suryawansh­i. “I went to the Net and deposited it through Zebpay (a company that trades in bitcoin). The Net was a bit slow. The transactio­n went through the next day, quite smoothly,” he said. Though the restaurant announced nearly two years ago that it was ready to accept bitcoin, the first transactio­n took place in June 2017. Prafesh said he would never forget it.

The Reserve Bank of India might be issuing warnings about the use of bitcoin, and scratching its head over regulation of this cryptocurr­ency. But in Bengaluru its use is widespread. You can buy bus tickets, a meal, order e-shopping vouchers of companies such as Amazon online, get a haircut (though for that you might have to go to Marathahal­li, nearly an hour from Bengaluru, for that’s where the beauty parlour and salon is) and order stuff online from nafa.in — all using bitcoin.

Unocoin is the company that operates bitcoin accounts. You can trade, hold and sell your bitcoins through this company for a one per cent commission that Unocoin charges when you convert bitcoins into Indian rupees. (In delicious irony, it is located on the first floor of a building that houses a branch of the State Bank of India on the ground floor). The CEO, Sathvik Vishwanath, also co-founded the company. He explained that he felt ripped off, when for every foreign currency transactio­n — whether USD or GBP or euro — intermedia­ries would shave off as much as six per cent in exchange. He used to work online for an American company and figured out that ultimately, all financial transactio­ns over the internet, when broken down, meant only passage of informatio­n. So if no physical money was changing hands in this vast internatio­nal financial transactio­n, why not trade in virtual currency?

“Bitcoin is the currency for the internet,” Vishwanath said. “If the internet were a country, then the currency for that country would be bitcoin. It allows users to do fast and free transactio­ns and without the need for middlemen to process the transactio­n. Unocoin is the trading platform for bitcoins where Indians can securely buy, sell, store, use and accept bitcoin. It has more than 200,000 users and processes more than 200 million INR every month.”

What about taxes — income tax, capital gains, goods and services tax...? He looked slightly shocked at the suggestion that trading in bitcoin meant his clients were doing something vaguely illegal. “We pay tax like any other company, though I am not sure how capital gains apply to us,” Vishwanath said. “We follow strict KYC norms. We are just a company like any other. We follow each and every rule. Of course, if there are no regulation­s, it doesn’t mean the transactio­n is illegal. After all, plying taxicabs was also unregulate­d. But it fulfils a felt need.”

Actually, bitcoin is a bit behind the times now. There are other currencies, for example, etherium, or the Linden dollar (255 linen dollars equal $1).

Unocoin has had some foreign investment. Last year it netted $1.75 million from Blume Ventures, the company that runs TaxiForSur­e. “This is not a very loss-making venture like Ola and Uber,” said Vishwanath. It is not hard to see why. Trading without borders rarely is.

But doesn’t he worry about safety? What if a client’s computer were hacked and someone just made off with all the bitcoins? After all, there was nothing backing the currency except, well, air and space. Vishwanath looked quizzicall­y. “Anybody can be robbed,” he said softly. “Anything can be robbed.”

What if there was a crash in the bitcoin market? Now he smiled wolfishly. “I am a trader. I don’t worry about crashes,” he said. Brick and mortar summons arrived. The network had broken down and systems were running slow. He left a number on the table. If someone had bought bitcoins worth $1,000 in January 2017, in June it was worth $2,280. Unocoin has 280,000 customers. The number is growing.

 ?? PHOTO: ADITI PHADNIS ?? A poster inside the Suryawansh­i restaurant in Bengaluru’s Indiranaga­r advertises that it accepts payments in bitcoins
PHOTO: ADITI PHADNIS A poster inside the Suryawansh­i restaurant in Bengaluru’s Indiranaga­r advertises that it accepts payments in bitcoins

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