February 22, 2026

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The ‘Wal-Mart’ of Venezuela Has Started Accepting Bitcoin

Bitcoinist.com
The ‘wal-mart’ of venezuela has started accepting bitcoin

The ‘Wal-Mart’ of Venezuela Has Started Accepting bitcoin
Venezuela traki

As Venezuela is in the grip of hyperinflation, a large local Wal-Mart-like department store has started to accept bitcoin for goods.

Cryptocurrencies: A Viable Alternative

More and more are cryptocurrencies establishing themselves as a viable alternative to Venezuela’s redenominated local currency the Sovereign Bolivar. TRAKI, a large local department store, has purportedly started to accept cryptocurrencies.

The ‘wal-mart’ of venezuela has started accepting bitcoin

According to a Reddit thread posted by user ImVito, she was able to purchase 884 items of school supplies and clothing with as little as $260 in BTC. Supposedly, the money was donated by the Reddit community and all the items will be going towards the country’s kids in need.

“Real Adoption and Real Help,” reads the thread as the user has also shared the transaction of the purchase. Apart from bitcoin, the department store also accepts Dash, Ethereum, Litecion (LTC) and bitcoin Cash (BCH).

The ‘wal-mart’ of venezuela has started accepting bitcoin

Venezuela’s Financial Catastrophe

The country has undoubtedly failed to maintain its control over its financial sovereignty with fiat as the International Monetary Fund projects that the local inflation rate will hit 1 million percent by the end of 2018.

Pressure, however, is only boiling up as the country recently instigated mandatory Petro payments for travel passports.

Venezuelan hyperinflation makes bitcoin an ideal way to transact

Amid the financial crisis, though, a trend is clearly outlined: peer-to-peer cryptocurrency trading has skyrocketed.

Bitcoinist reported November 7 that the country has traded 1075 BTC in 7 days until November 3, beating all previous highs. The above example is only one which outlines why cryptocurrencies are shaping up as preferred means of payment in the country.

Just a few months back, though, another Reddit user shared his story of how he managed to feed an entire community off of NANO donations. At the time, NANO was worth $2.71 per coin, but the user outlined:

0.5 nano is almost one entire monthly salary in my country. It’s more than I made last month.

Moreover, just yesterday the oldest newspaper in the country – El Impulso, has publicly recommended people to sell their cars for BTC as a means of protecting their money from inflation. The publication stressed that users don’t need foreign accounts nor do they need to hold a large amount of other currencies in cash if they use bitcoin.

What do you think of the financial crisis in Venezuela? Don’t hesitate to let us know in the comments below!

Images courtesy of Shutterstock

The post The ‘Wal-Mart’ of Venezuela Has Started Accepting Bitcoin appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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The White Elephant in the Room – EOS Investors Shell Out $700m for Purposeless Token

One of the main snippets of advice given to inexperienced crypto traders is to try and look for altcoins that have a purpose or technology that can be applied in real-world situations. Many of them do just that including Ethereum, NEO, Substratum, OmiseGO, Power Ledger, Factom, Iota and TenX to name a few. Then there are those that are just currencies such as bitcoin and Litecoin which can also be outstanding investment opportunities as we have seen in recent months.


What is a mystery is the amount of investment that has gone into cryptos that do not really offer anything aside from a blockchain. According to an article on Wall Street Journal investors have already spent $700 million on a tech startup offering a digital token which they themselves state has no purpose.

FOMO Flashes

The company, Block.one, raised the funds during the ICO which has come at a time of mass crypto mania and big doses of FOMO (fear of missing out). The report went on to claim that the Cayman Islands-registered company develops software via an open source website; it has created a blockchain platform that does not really offer anything beyond the thousands that already exist in the crypto sphere.

The website offers a pretty standard ‘we are a scalable decentralized app platform’ statement with a basic white paper and a few team photos. They have been auctioning 2 million tokens every day to raise funds for the ICO. The EOS core code is posted publically and the company released a new version of it last week causing a now commonly seen spike in price that usually follows altcoin news.

FOMO Flashes

Toothless Token

Once the platform is released the EOS tokens that have no real relationship to it will serve no purpose. Block.one only intends to write the base code and let third-party developers do the rest.  The WSJ states that a purchase agreement which investors must sign states the tokens “do not have any rights, uses, purpose, attributes, functionalities or features.” In this way, the token seems like the proverbial “white elephant” – expensive to own but serving no purpose.

The current buying frenzy just shows that people are still willing to invest in concepts that are being built for a technological market that doesn’t exist yet. With a market capacity of $5.1 billion EOS is one of the top altcoins of the moment, sitting at 14th place in the crypto cap charts. It has jumped over 450% this month from $1.97 to an all-time high today of $11.11, market corrections have seen the price fall back a little but it is clearly evident that traders are still going crypto nuts.

Is EOS just another useless “white elephant” of a token or will it eventually have some purpose? Would you invest in EOS? Let us know in the comments below.


Images courtesy of AdobeStock, Wikimedia Commons

The post The White Elephant in the Room – EOS Investors Shell Out $700m for Purposeless Token appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.