Amex-Backed Bitcoin Venture Lands In US, EU Boots Bitcoin As Commodity (2024)

American Express made headlines yesterday, mainly for its less-than-stellar quarterly earnings. But it also made headlines for its connection to a much less traditional financial story.

Its investment in a bitcoin venture.

Which is somewhat amusing, particularly becauseAmerican Express CEO Kenneth Chenault once expressed skepticism about bitcoin’s potential by saying: “There’s a reason credit cards were invented.” Admittedly, at the same time (around December 2014), he also recognized the room for new players in the financial space was very much a viable conclusion.

So now, it appears that Amex’s bitcoin bet may be paying off as Abra, thebitcoin venture it invested in this September, has launched into the U.S. andPhilippines. So what’s making all thesefinancial institutions throw their weight behind bitcoin services? The big buzzword in the marketplace today of course is “blockchain” — and that’s exactly what’s driving Amex and other major financial players to support Abra.

Abra announced Wednesday (Oct. 21) that it will be expanding its bitcoin services that allow merchants to accept bitcoin from consumers — via an app, of course. It also enables consumers to send money from their phone to any other phone — or digital currenciesfrom one phone number to another using that app (and to anyone in the world). The expansion into new territories was made possible with a $14 million round — led by Amex and the emeritus of Tata Sons, the holding company of Indian conglomerate Tata — that closed last month.

Amex’s decision to back the bitcoin venture comes at an interesting time for bitcoin startups and the potential for blockchain technology. Other major players supporting bitcoin startups include NASDAQ, Visa, Goldman Sachs and the NYSE.

“As people and businesses transact more globally, there’s a need for more convenient and affordable ways to move money, and we think the blockchain could play an important role in the evolution of money transfer and commerce, especially in emerging markets,” Harshul Sanghi, American Ventures managing partner, said in a statement.

Abra is also planning torelease its bitcoin-powered remittance app soon, pending approval from Apple’s App Store.

EU: Bitcoin is Currency — Not Commodity

Just a month after theU.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) declared bitcoin a commodity, the EU has taken its own approach in the other direction.

The European Union Court ruled this week that virtual currencies are, in fact, a currency and not a commodity. Where this matters, of course, is in how they’re taxed. Because of this ruling, bitcoin isconsidered tax-free. But from Europe’s perspective, bitcoin and other virtual currencies now have a stamp of approval toward being considered an actual currency.

Thursday’s ruling is part of a dispute in the region with the U.K. tax authority that had decided that bitcoin is a currency. Other countries, like Sweden and Germany, however, wanted to call it a commodity, so transfers would bring sales taxes.

Why There Just Might Be Hope For Bitcoin

Balaji Srinivasan, the CEO of bitcoin startup 21 Inc., is making big bets on bitcoin’s future.

The reason, he says? Its underlying technology. According to musings fromSrinivasan at the WSJDLive tech conference, that technology is what is going to transform bitcoin’s reputation and gain it widespread support in multiple industries, as well asconvince consumers that bitcoin is worth learning about.

Srinivasan compared what bitcoin is doing now to what theopen-source software Linux did for Android’s mobile-operating system. Consumers aren’t really aware of what underpins Android’s technology — but they are users of it. The same could go for bitcoin, he said.

“What happened is Linux won but by stealth,” Srinivasan said. “In the same way, I think that a lot of people are going to be using bitcoin without realizing they’re using bitcoin.”

His thoughts on bitcoin’s potential growth comes at the time where (as seen above) many major financial players are putting stake in bitcoin’s technology: the blockchain. Conversations are starting to spark about how bitcoin could change the way money moves around the globe, how consumers transact and how money transfers hands — and at what speed that money transfers.

But what bitcoin and the blockchain really need is to be synonymous with a specific device. That way, the technology behind the bitcoin transactions are invisible to the consumer. It’s just like when Microsoft built Internet protocol into Windows,Srinivasan said.

“We think something similar is going to happen with bitcoin where once bitcoin is built into devices, and devices natively have the capacity to turn power into digital currency, then a whole new class of applications will be built on the Internet,” Srinivasan said.

Recommended

Can Plummeting Turkey Prices Fatten up Sales for Thanksgiving Brands?

Yedpay and Mastercard Introduce ‘One Touch’ Payment Solution

Spendesk Integrates With TravelPerk to Streamline Business Travel

Nearly 35% of Hotel Guests Prompted to Tip Amid Shifting Gratuity Norms

See More In: Bitcoin, Blockchain, digital currencies, Feautred, What's Trending - Featured

Amex-Backed Bitcoin Venture Lands In US, EU Boots Bitcoin As Commodity (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rubie Ullrich

Last Updated:

Views: 5915

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rubie Ullrich

Birthday: 1998-02-02

Address: 743 Stoltenberg Center, Genovevaville, NJ 59925-3119

Phone: +2202978377583

Job: Administration Engineer

Hobby: Surfing, Sailing, Listening to music, Web surfing, Kitesurfing, Geocaching, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Rubie Ullrich, I am a enthusiastic, perfect, tender, vivacious, talented, famous, delightful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.