Coinbase Is Opening The First Regulated Bitcoin Exchange In The U.S.

Fresh from scoring a massive $75 million funding round, bitcoin payment firm Coinbase has revealed that it will open the first regulated bitcoin exchange in the U.S. on Monday.
The company, which added the New York Stock Exchange and USAA to its list of investors last week, told the Wall Street Journal
that it has “regulatory approval” in half of all states, including
significant areas like New York and California. (The New York Department
of Financial Services has been very vocal in its call for regulation via a proposed ‘BitLicense’.)
Coinbase already offers exchange services in 19 countries overseas,
and it said that its work accruing necessary licenses and approvals in
the U.S. took five months. The company will only be able to offer
services to customers that sign up in states were it is approved, but
there are plans to gain approval in further states.
Exchanges made via the Coinbase service will include a 0.25 percent
commission fee that goes to Coinbase, although the company is giving
customers two months of free trades to get things going.
The exact legality of bitcoin in the U.S. has been unclear for some
time, so Coinbase’s news — and regulatory backing — is a significant
mark in the sand.
The busting of Silk Road,
an underground market for illicit goods where bitcoin’s anonymity made
it a popular payment option, has doubtless eased some early opinions
that bitcoin’s modus operandi was financing nefarious activity, but
there’s still plenty of uncertainty about it as a digital currency. The price of a single bitcoin dropped as low as $185 this month — it is currently $263, but crossed $1,000 in 2013 — and it is unclear whether it has reached relative stability.
As for the Coinbase business itself, CEO Brian Armstrong is keen to
explore the potential of bitcoin in emerging markets, and wants the
company to expand its reach to at least 30 countries overall by the end
of 2015.
Coinbase had a huge year in 2014, and its achievements included
landing several big name retail partners — who began accepting bitcoin
for the first time — including Overstock, Dell, Square, Mozilla and
Wikipedia.

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