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$363 Million Funding Round Puts Robinhood on Fast-Track to Build ‘Largest Crypto Platform’

$363 million funding round puts robinhood on fast-track to build ‘largest crypto platform’

$363 Million Funding Round Puts Robinhood on Fast-Track to Build ‘Largest Crypto Platform’

Robinhood
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Cryptocurrency-friendly stock trading app Robinhood is now valued at $5.6 billion following a mammoth funding round.

The fintech startup announced on Thursday that it had raised $363 million in a Series D funding round led by DST Global.

“At Robinhood, we’re guided by the belief that America’s financial system should work for everyone – not only the wealthy,” the company said in a statement. “Our platform has also grown significantly, reaching over four million users, cementing Robinhood Financial as the fastest-growing brokerage ever.”

Though best known for its commission-free stock brokerage platform, Robinhood has also begun rolling out bitcoin and ethereum trading, with more coins expected to be added in the future.

The funding round will provide the company with a gigantic war chest as it seeks to take aim at Coinbase, the dominant firm in the US cryptocurrency brokerage market.

Coinbase
Robinhood’s $363 million in new capital will help it build out its new cryptocurrency brokerage platform as it seeks to supplant coinbase as the leader in the us market. | source: shutterstock

At present, Robinhood Crypto is available in 10 states, and the company continues to release it on a state-by-state basis as it acquires money transmitter licenses in new jurisdictions.

Coinbase’s platform is far more robust, and the company also has first-mover advantage — along with a global user base that includes 20 million registered accounts (users can sign up for Coinbase wallets even if trading is not offered in their locality). Coinbase has reportedly internally valued itself at $8 billion, though this has not been confirmed by a third-party audit and the firm has declined to comment publicly.

However, Robinhood has more in its favor than just a well-stocked war chest. The platform — which started as a smartphone app but now also has a web interface — allows users to hold cryptocurrencies in the same account that they use to trade stocks, so it may be preferable for people who primarily view cryptocurrency primarily as an investment rather than a financial instrument.

Robinhood also offers premium users the ability to trade on leverage, though this feature is not currently available for its cryptocurrency service.

“We expect by the end of the year to be either the largest or one of the largest crypto platforms out there,” Robinhood co-founder and co-CEO Baiju Bhatt told Fortune. “But we also really feel we’ll have the absolute best experience for investing in crypto as well—from having a large variety of coins available to a more favorable cost structure—mainly no commissions—to just quality of product.”

Of course, Coinbase and Robinhood aren’t the only two players gunning for this segment of the lucrative retail market. Fellow fintech startups Square and Circle Invest each hope to capture a large segment of this market demographic as well.

Featured Image from Robinhood

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Published at Thu, 10 May 2018 16:52:44 +0000

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Chinese Bitcoin Exchanges Expected to Resume Withdrawals Soon

Withdrawals are expected to resume soon in China as bitcoin exchanges are finalizing regulatory guidelines with the country’s central bank.


Exchange Requests Proof of Customers’ Funds

It seems like the moratorium on cryptocurrency withdrawals from Chinese bitcoin exchanges imposed by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) may be coming to an end. A new round of PBoC meetings are being held this week to discuss the regulation draft details with the heads of Chinese BTC exchanges, according to local news resource cnLedger.

Now it appears that exchanges in the country are starting to ask users for detailed explanations/proof of fund sources along with their intended withdrawal destinations. 

According to an (unconfirmed) email, translated from Chinese, from the Huobi exchange, users must provide account information, login information and account UID along with explanations of the sources of the funds to be withdrawn.

Bitcoinist_PBOC

The exchange also requests a screenshot of a detailed transactions list between user’s bank account from which the funds were deposited. Moreover, users are requested to identify the wallet to which they want to send their coins (personal wallet or otherwise) as well as explain for what purpose the cryptocurrency (i.e. commodity) will be used.

Although no limits have been stipulated by Huobi, a previous draft by the People’s Bank of China suggests that users could also be required to verify their identity in person before initially depositing or withdrawing any sum above 50,000 CNY (roughly 6.6 BTC).

The suspension of withdrawals was initially expected to last for a month, although exchanges announced that they would extend the moratorium until regulators approve the internal compliance upgrades, which we may now be seeing.

With the implementation of these new rules, similar to KYC (Know-Your-Customer) regulations with which many foreign bitcoin exchanges already comply with (e.g. Coinbase), exchanges in China are expected to resume withdrawals soon.

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Regulations Transformed bitcoin in China

The latest moves by the PBoC have changed the bitcoin landscape dramatically. The regulatory clampdown, which resulted in the drafting of new AML procedures, the end of zero-fee trading, and a temporary suspension of withdrawals, forced traders to seek alternatives elsewhere (e.g. Japan) such as P2P trading services like LocalBitcoins and BitKan, where there is less regulatory scrutiny but higher premiums. 

“If users want to trade more that 5 BTC a day – they need to comply with KYC and AML guidelines,”  BitKan CEO Leon Liu told Bitcoinist in a recent interview. “The maximum is 5 BTC without having to submit any personal information.”

Following the suspension of withdrawals, CNY has gone from comprising over 90% of all bitcoin trading volume to just under 10% today. 

day_vol_cny_180_11490101045035

Now, as Chinese exchanges are gearing up to resume withdrawals under strict AML and KYC guidelines, the biggest question is whether users will be willing to jump through more hoops to buy and trade cryptocurrency or whether they will continue to seek alternatives instead, such as more anonymous P2P services or even anonymizing cryptocurrencies

Some have already started sharing their predictions saying that holders will withdraw bitcoin to off-exchange wallets and then sell on the aforementioned P2P platforms at a 8-10% premium.


Images courtesy of cryptocompare.com, Shutterstock, Twitter

The post Chinese Bitcoin Exchanges Expected to Resume Withdrawals Soon appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.