Two London-based bitcoin startups have unveiled a new system that âring-fencesâ customer funds from other operations.
As part of the set up, derivatives trading platform Crypto Facilities will continue to match buyers and sellers, but its partner, Elliptic, will take custody of the platformâs funds at its cold storage vault.
Though common practice in capital markets, todayâs announcement is the first of its kind for the bitcoin space, where exchanges have lost millions to hackers targeting funds in their centralised wallets, or by simply not holding them at all.
In a statement, Crypto Facilities CEO Timo Schlaefer described the move as a âwatershed momentâ for bitcoin trading, adding:
âExperienced market participants will immediately recognise that we have done away with one of the biggest risk factors in the bitcoin ecosystem.â
Meanwhile, Ellipticâs CEO James Smith said a segregated settlement system such as this was an âessential stepâ toward companies performing bitcoin trading on a larger scale.
âWith Crypto Facilitiesâ strong and robust trading infrastructure, we expect trade in bitcoin derivatives will flourish, improving bitcoinâs price stability and driving enterprise adoption,â he added.
To use one of Ellipticâs âring fencedâ accounts, Crypto Facilities customers will be charged an annual fee â 0.75% of their account value.
Alternatively, they can stick with the default offline storage the firm offers at no additional cost.
Each day, after Crypto Facilitiesâ accounts are settled at 5pm (UTC) to reflect their trading movements in the last 24 hours, Elliptic will settle these balances in its accounts via an API.
Using the wallet addresses Elliptic provides, users will be able to cross-reference their daily account balance with bitcoinâs blockchain.
Itâs the kind of simple real-time auditing that bitcoinâs public ledger makes possible, without getting stuck in Merkle Trees and external reports â which often only provide a snapshot of an exchangeâs reserves at one moment in time.
The bitcoins themselves are held in Ellipticâs cold storage vaults, which are fully insured. At its launch in early 2014, the vault was the first of its kind to insure bitcoin assets. Other key players in the bitcoin ecosystem, including Circle and Coinbase, have since followed suit.
Fence image via Shutterstock