Business Standard

Cryptocurr­ency universe in battle for Mission Survival

A 3-part series looks at how the cryptocurr­ency players are dealing with the all-round clampdown on a system that’s in no-man’s land

- DILASHA SETH & SOMESH JHA

“If the government can ban its own currency, it can, of course, ban any other currency, which it doesn’ t have control over ,” San deep Go enka,of Zeb pay, one of the top cryp to currency exchanges in India, said at a recent panel discussion on virtual currency such as bitcoins. Indeed, the cryp to currency universe in the country is staring at uncertaint­y like never before, as banks and payment gateway partners are increasing­ly with drawing support. WhileAxisB­ank, ICICI Bank, and HDFC Bank have been closing accounts of cryp to currency exchanges for quite sometime now, there are others, including Band han Bank and RB L Bank, which continue to back these platforms.

In such nervous times, cryp to currency players are coming out with novel ideas to stay a float .“The key to survive at the moment is having multiple bank accounts ,” said As his h Ag garw al, founder of an upcoming exchange, Bitsachs. Infact, Coinsecure, a four-year old Delhi-based exchange, has five banking partners at the moment—YES Bank, HDFC Bank, RBL Bank, Bandhan Bank, and State Bank of India. It faced initial hiccups with bank swayback in 2015, when Axis Bank shut accounts for all exchanges .“That was their internal policy. But now they again want to open the account for us. We do not see any problems with the banking channels now,” said 27-year-old Mohit Kalra, who founded the exchange with Benson Samuel. The idea of opening an exchange for cryp to currency, which are virtual currencies stored electronic­ally using the block chain technology, struck K al ra when he was in Singapore about eight years ago. Incidental­ly, the first Asian conference on cryp to currency was taking place in the hotel he was staying in, here called.

“I meta few developers there who told me to mine bitcoins,” Kalra said, adding, “I was the largest min erin India from 2010 till 2013- end. The problem was that I was collecting a lot of coins, but there was no place to sell those coins in India. Even if someone was willing to buy it for cash in India, the prices were too low, with a difference of 20-30 percent from global prices. That’ s what pushed me to open the exchange, where Indians could buy and sell their bit coins ,” Kalra said.

However, even before starting the exchange, the Reserve Bank of India issued its first warning in 2013, cautioning investors against the risks of dealing with cryptocurr­ency.

Bitcoins or other cryptocurr­ency is like gold in more ways than one. Like gold, cryptocurr­ency has to be mined; it doesn’t have a central issuing authority and is a deregulate­d currency. There is no central bank that decides when and how many more cryptocurr­ency to produce. At present, there are around 17-million bitcoins in circulatio­n and four million coins waiting to be mined.

Despite the absence of a regulatory framework for cryptocurr­ency, three warnings from the central bank and one from the central government to date, the industry, with nine exchanges, is witnessing volumes worth ~50 billion every month, Goenka said. He was part of a traditiona­l family business, before he joined hands with software engineer Mahin Gupta to rebrand

India’s first cryptocurr­ency platform, BuySellBit­co.in into Zebpay.

But the regulatory warnings rang an alarm bell with various support systems of the cryptocurr­ency business, especially the banking network.

Earlier this month, exchange platform Koinex halted rupee transactio­ns on its exchange for over two weeks after “a tussle between payment service partner and its bank”. It resumed withdrawal­s thereafter. Koinex was facing problems essentiall­y because it was running on a single bank account.

According to people in the know, banks have been instructed by the government to keep a check on the transactio­ns that are going through such accounts. “Apparently banks have stopped their support to payment gateways that are connected to cryptocurr­ency trading websites,” said a person aware of the developmen­t.

Thirty four year old Sathvik Vishwanath, founder of Unocoin, said a lot of banks have taken a risk-compliance attitude towards cryptocurr­ency

exchange platforms. “They are of the view that if you are doing bitcoin trading activity, we don’t really want to support you or have you as customer. And that is due to lack of regulation­s,” he said.

Dip in business

The 28-question income-tax (I-T) department survey across exchanges in December and the government’s statement in the same month likening it to a ‘Ponzi scheme’ sent panic waves across investor circles. Coinsecure, that has a user base of 250,000, witnessed a 70 per cent drop in the volume of transactio­ns. “The transactio­ns have fallen from ~250 million a day before the government circular to ~100 million a day now,” said Kalra.

The government in December said that virtual currencies were not backed by the government fiat and were ‘not legal tender.’ It further said that consumers needed to be extremely cautious, so as to avoid getting trapped in such ‘Ponzi schemes.’ Goenka of Zebpay, which has three million users, said his

interactio­ns with NITI Aayog, the government’s policy think tank, made him hopeful. “When we talk to the Aayog, it feels like my battles are won, but when I am back in office, it’s a different story.’’

Even investors are cautious while trading in cryptocurr­ency after the I-T sleuths’ recent surveys. “We have been cautious in our investment­s. So, I have decided that whatever profit I earn out of my investment­s in cryptocurr­ency, I will set aside 30 per cent for paying taxes,” 26year-old web developer Nitin Kacharia said, who started investing in various cryptocurr­encies, including ripple and ethereum, since September last year.

Exchanges tighten disclosure norms

The cryptocurr­ency exchanges, too, are tightening know-your-customer (KYC) norms. Most of them halted registrati­ons in December as the backlog piled up. Coinsecure has hired 40 new persons for KYC verificati­on. Besides, it is planning to mandate Aadhaar for automated eKYC verificati­on instead of the

three documents — permanent account number card, ID proof, and address proof.

“We had temporaril­y stopped registrati­on due to too much load. Everyday thousands of users are adding on,” said Kalra. They are working on making Aadhaar mandatory.

Fresh registrati­on on Koinex has still not resumed; Unocoin is rejecting applicatio­ns for not submitting Aadhaar as residentia­l proof; Zebpay and BuyUcoin ask fresh users to submit a soft copy of cancelled cheques to validate their bank accounts. Meanwhile, competing cryptocurr­ency exchanges are coming together to push the government to give legitimacy to their business. In 2016, Zebpay, Coinsecure, and Unocoin launched the Digital Assets and Blockchain Foundation India. This has now expanded to become Blockchain and Cryptocurr­ency Committee under the Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India. Competitio­n can wait, as cryptocurr­ency enthusiast­s argue.

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