Andreessen Horowitzâs cryptocurrency fund A16z Crypto and venture capital firm Polychain Capital have invested $25 million in cryptocurrency payments startup Celo.
Celo announced Tuesday that the two investors have purchased $15 million and $10 million in the projectâs Celo Gold tokens, respectively.
The token-based funding effort also saw participation from âseveral other leading institutionsâ from across the world, Celo said, with the amounts not being disclosed.
Celoâs protocol is designed to be mobile-friendly and âultralight,â allowing funds to be sent to cellphone numbers. The Celo Gold token it describes as a âdeflationaryâ cryptocurrency that cuts down on price volatility. The startup also offers another token, the Celo Dollar, which is a stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar.
On the business level, it aims to enable easier remittances, cash-transfer programs and micropayments through its open-source platform, taking an initial focus on helping unbanked or underbanked people.
The firm said:
âWe strongly believe that anyone, regardless of their location or socio-economic status, should have access to basic financial tools for storing and transmitting currency.â
Celo has recently run pilots of the âeasy-to-use wallet appâ in Argentina and Tanzania enabling âverifiedâ users and merchants to send and receive small payments. It is planning to release a public testnet of its platform this summer, according to the announcement.
Itâs also been attracting some notable talent recently. Chuck Kimble, former head of financial institution partnerships at Circle, joined Celo in February as head of strategic partnership. And, in September, former Ripple general counsel Brynly Llyr took on the same role at Celo.
In Tuesdayâs announcement, the firm added that it now has over 40 contributors to the project internationally, drawing expertise from the World Bank Group and the UN; tech firms like Google, Microsoft and Apple; and financial companies such as PayPal and Morgan Stanley. Academia is involved too, and individuals at MIT, Stanford, Harvard and Berkeley are also assisting.
Featured image courtesy of CeloÂ