Despite Bitcoin’s (BTC) promise of a peer-to-peer world, building a Bitcoin-first business in 2022 still requires third-party intermediaries. Whether it’s startup capital, using fiat money or simply exploiting fiat payment rails, Bitcoin business means interaction with the legacy financial system.
For the vast majority of Bitcoin-based businesses, this means that they probably need a bank.
Cointelegraph spoke to Bitcoin-only businesses about their experiences working with banks, given that ultimately, Bitcoin gets a lot of bad press in mainstream media. Plus, some of the banking industry’s biggest supporters love to bash Bitcoin. Ben Price, founder of the Bitcoin Company, recently shared that the company had lost “dozens of dozens of banking partnership opportunities simply because we’re a Bitcoin company.”
We’ve lost dozens of banking partnership opportunities simply because we’re a Bitcoin company.
We’ve lost even more for simply following the law and fighting to minimize required user data and re-normalize financial privacy.
Most companies simply sell users out for simplicity.
— abitcoinperson (@abitcoinperson) June 8, 2022
Price was a product manager at Visa for years before founding the Bitcoin Company. He told Cointelegraph that the Bitcoin Company’s “goal is to bring Bitcoin to the whole world” because it’s “a real catalyst for improvement in our civilization.”
Price grew frustrated while working at Visa — not because he was a “hardcore Bitcoin maxi” but due to slow progress. According to him, projects relating to payments, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), noncustodial wallets and more were regularly shuttered or mothballed. Plus, the legacy finance system’s inner workings came into question. Carman told Cointelegraph:
“And, at the end of the day, Visa kind of serves the banks. They don’t serve consumers.”
The Bitcoin Company is part of a new range of Bitcoin “neobanks” — banks that treat Bitcoin as native currency alongside fiat. From The Bitcoin Company in the United States to Xapo in Gibraltar an CoinCorner in the United Kingdom, Bitcoin neobanks are flexing their financial muscles. In short, they’re allowing people to live on a Bitcoin standard and easily interact with the legacy financial system.
Carman explains that Bitcoin neobanks derive from a desire to “hyperbitcoinize” — i.e., spur Bitcoin mass adoption — while conceding that only a smaller group of people will adopt Bitcoin as the cypherpunks originally intended. He splits Bitcoin users into two pools: the cypherpunks who prioritize privacy, bury their seed phrases in the yard, mix their coins and run Bitcoin nodes; and the other 95% of people — such as his mom and sister, he explains — who will likely need access to a Bitcoin neobank. According to Carma
“To bring Bitcoin to most people around the world will probably require a gradual transition away from fiat legacy systems onto a Bitcoin standard. And to do that, you need to provide both pools.”
However, why can’t banks integrate Bitcoin and capitalize on the new technology and profit from Bitcoin’s success? Christian Ander, founder of the Swedish Bitcoin exchange BTCX, told Cointelegraph, “Many banks have a policy not to engage with or onboard Bitcoin and crypto companies. It doesn’t matter if the company complies with regulations or not.”
Danny Brewster, CEO of Bitcoin trading platform FastBitcoins, told Cointelegraph that banking Bitcoin-only companies, such as FastBitcoins, have persisted since 2013. However, banks initially didn’t want to do Bitcoin business due to “a lack of understanding,” Brewster told Cointelegraph.
Fast forward to 2022, and “Despite regulatory clarification and increased scrutiny, the wider crypto market is a mess with the likes of LUNA, 3AC, etc.” Brewster explained that due to the Terra implosion and the subsequent…
Read More: cointelegraph.com