June 13, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

New York Regulator Grants Licenses to Robinhood Crypto and Libertyx

New york regulator grants licenses to robinhood crypto and libertyx

New York Regulator Grants Licenses to Robinhood Crypto and Libertyx

New york regulator grants licenses to robinhood crypto and libertyx

Robinhood Crypto and Libertyx have been granted licenses by the New York State Department of Financial Services. Robinhood is now authorized to offer the buying, selling and storing of seven cryptocurrencies. Meanwhile, Libertyx has become the first Bitlicensee to allow customers to use debit cards to purchase BTC from traditional ATMs in New York.

Also read: Indian Supreme Court Moves Crypto Hearing, Community Calls for Positive Regulations

Robinhood Crypto

New york regulator grants licenses to robinhood crypto and libertyxThe New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) has approved the virtual currency license applications of Robinhood Crypto Llc and Moon Inc., dba Libertyx. Robinhood has also received a money transmission license. To date, the NYDFS has approved 16 companies to offer crypto services in New York. The regulator’s announcement reads:

[NY]DFS has authorized Robinhood Crypto to offer services for buying, selling, and storing seven virtual currencies, including bitcoin, ether, bitcoin cash, and litecoin.

Robinhood subsequently tweeted: “We just received our Bitlicense and money transmitter license for NY. Expect us to roll out crypto there over the coming months.”

New york regulator grants licenses to robinhood crypto and libertyx

The platform also supports real-time market data for BTG, DASH, LSK, XMR, NEO, OMG, QTUM, XRP, XLM, and ZEC. While noting a plan to support the buying and selling of additional cryptocurrencies, the company emphasized on its website that “supporting market data for individual cryptocurrencies does not necessarily mean we plan to add buying and selling.” Furthermore, the platform “doesn’t support ICOs at this time,” its website describes.

In addition to New York, the service is currently available in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and Washington state.

New york regulator grants licenses to robinhood crypto and libertyx

Libertyx

Libertyx CEO Chris Yim described the review process to obtain a Bitlicense as “extensive,” the NYDFS quoted him as saying. The regulator elaborated:

In New York, Libertyx, which will provide consumers the sale of bitcoin through debit terminals, is the first [NY]DFS virtual currency licensee to allow customers to use debit cards to purchase bitcoin from traditional ATMs.

New york regulator grants licenses to robinhood crypto and libertyx

The company launched its first bitcoin ATM in 2014 and has been growing its network of stores where people can buy BTC. “Today we have thousands of local stores where you can walk-up and purchase bitcoin instantly,” reads its website. “Our network includes local store cashiers, standalone debit kiosks, and traditional ATMs.”

What do you think of Robinhood Crypto and Libertyx obtaining licenses to operate in New York? Let us know in the comments section below.


Images courtesy of Shutterstock and the NYDFS.


Need to calculate your bitcoin holdings? Check our tools section.

The post New York Regulator Grants Licenses to Robinhood Crypto and Libertyx appeared first on Bitcoin News.

source: https://news.bitcoin.com/new-york-regulator-licenses-robinhood-crypto-libertyx/

Published at Fri, 25 Jan 2019 02:48:14 +0000

Previous Article

Power Move

Next Article

Bitcoin still struggle on bullish.

You might be interested in …

Japanese Company Will Launch New Bitcoin Mining Operation With 7 nm Chips

GMO Internet Group Launches Massive Bitcoin Mining Operation With 7 nm Chips

GMO Internet Group, a Japanese provider of a full spectrum of internet services for both the consumer and enterprise markets, is launching a new bitcoin mining business utilizing next-generation 7 nanometer (7 nm) semiconductor chips. “[We] believe this new business has high potential for increasing corporate value in the future,” states the company.

Headquartered in Tokyo, GMO IG comprises more than 60 companies in 10 countries. GMO IG’s size and financial muscle, as well as the novel technologies it wants to leverage, will make it a serious entrant in the bitcoin mining industry, and one that could have a disruptive impact.

“We will operate a next-generation mining center utilizing renewable energy and cutting-edge semiconductor chips in Northern Europe,” GMO stated, emphasizing that they will invest in R&D and manufacturing of hardware including the next-generation mining chip. “We will use cutting-edge 7 nm process technology for chips to be used in the mining process, and jointly work on its research and development and manufacturing with our alliance partner having semiconductor design technology.”

The International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors defines 7 nm semiconductor chip technology as the next technology iteration following 10 nm technology, which, in turn, follows the 14-16 nm technology that currently represents the state-of the-art hardware in the bitcoin mining industry. Commercial production of 7 nm chips is still in the development stage with GlobalFoundries, IBM, Intel, Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) competing for market leadership.

According to a recent article in Android Authority, TSMC seems to be in the pole position in this race, having already showcased a preliminary 7 nm SRAM chip — not yet a full system on a chip (SoC) but an important milestone. Intel is said to be planning the upgrade of a manufacturing plant in Arizona to start building 7 nm SoCs. Samsung and GlobalFoundries are also striving to catch up.

According to Quartz, 7 nm technology would be four times more energy efficient than the current bitcoin mining industry standard. Therefore, once 7 nm chips are in use, all other miners will have to upgrade to stay in the game.

“It’s clearly the next generation of miners,” Diego Gutierrez, CEO of mining software developer RSK Labs, told Quartz. “The other [mining chip makers] will surely follow and create their own 7 nm chips if they are not already doing it. As [chip manufacturers] get the new technology, everybody can access it.”

“We believe that cryptocurrencies will develop into ‘new universal currencies’ available for use by anyone from any country or region to freely exchange ‘value,’ creating a new borderless economic zone,” notes GMO IG. “[bitcoin] can be regarded as a distributed system whose credibility is secured by mutual monitoring by network participants, as opposed to legal currencies which are a centralized system whose credibility is secured by the issuer. And management of a distributed system such as [bitcoin] requires a mining process.”

The entry in the bitcoin mining sector of these new Japanese players with relatively deep pockets is likely to be welcomed by those concerned about China’s dominance of the mining industry. For example, Chinese mining operator and hardware manufacturer Bitmain plays a dominant role in the $70 billion bitcoin economy. Its mining pools, Antpool, BTC.com and ConnectBTC, account for around 30 percent of all the processing power on the global bitcoin network, while the company is also the market leader for specialized mining hardware, including ASIC chips.

In related news, another large Japanese company, DMM, announced the launch of its own Virtual Currency Division, scheduled to begin operation of a virtual currency mining business “DMM Mining Farm” in October 2017. According to the company, which hasn’t released further information, DMM will operate one of the 10 largest mining farms in the world before the end of 2018.

The post Japanese Company Will Launch New Bitcoin Mining Operation With 7 nm Chips appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.