Australia-based igot has announced the next phase of its bid to be the âfastest-growing bitcoin exchange in the worldâ, opening for business in over 40 countries including the European Union and parts of the Middle East and Africa.
CEO Rick Day told CoinDesk the exchange has âsolid banking relationshipsâ in the EU, saying there are now over 100 banking options for users to choose from.
As well as the EU, igot indicated that it has also secured a partnership in Kenya and will launch there in the very near future. Kenyan customers will able to cash out from their igot accounts directly to the countryâs M-Pesa mobile payment system.
Customers in all 40 of igotâs serviced countries, Day said, have full access to all exchange features, including the ability to deposit and withdraw from their local banks. The only service not available outside Australia at this point is the popular bill-payment service which accesses the countryâs BPAY network.
In an aggressive drive to attract new customers, the exchange recently dropped its buy price to 0% and its sell commission to 0.5%. Igot already does not charge fees for deposits or withdrawals.
Trade volumes, Day said, have leapt 400% to a daily 1,200 BTC since the new pricing scheme launched, and customer signups are showing a new diversity among bitcoin users.
âA lot of older people and female customers have started signing up. This shows that bitcoin is going mainstream for sure.â
Igotâs expansion has been swift, given that other multinational exchanges like BitX have cited regulatory compliance and banking procedures in different jurisdictions as a speed hump.
Yet, it has still been a time-consuming process, Day said, adding:
âWe spent months working on this. Weâve secured solid banking relationships, as well has worked with the right partners in each jurisdiction to make sure weâre completely compliant in those regions.â
Igot is busy redesigning its home page to reflect the new international flavor, which is set to go live next week.
The global remittance market has long been one of igotâs main targets, and it is for this reason the company is also targeting the Middle East, with its large populations of foreign workers who are mainly drawn from the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.
The firm launched the United Arab Emiratesâ first bitcoin exchange in Dubai in August and plans to expand even further into countries such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
A âfull-fledged remittance strategyâ will launch soon with a bitcoin backend, allowing transfers a sub-1% fee to bank accounts within igotâs existing markets.
The firmâs largest markets at this stage remain its home nation of Australia and India, where it has a subsidiary office. Liquidity in India, Day said, has âimproved dramaticallyâ in the past couple of months.
UAE to India is the strongest remittance channel, though the UAE market overall sees a higher volume of bitcoin sell orders than buys.
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