The super-charged trajectory of the cryptocurrency industry is translating to faster growth at the publicly traded digital-asset brokerage Voyager Digital, where revenue this quarter is tracking at an eightfold increase over the prior 12 monthsâ average pace.Â
Voyager CEO Steve Ehrlich told CoinDesk in a Zoom interview that the companyâs on pace for revenue of about $2 million during the fiscal first quarter that ends Sept. 30. That compares with $1.1 million during the fiscal year that ended in June.
The companyâs shares, listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange, have rallied about 250% year, far surpassing the 49% year-to-date gains for the largest cryptocurrency, bitcoin (BTC), and 169% for No. 2 ether (ETH).Â
Ehrlich said in the interview that heâs perfectly happy having investors buy Voyagerâs shares as a play on the cryptocurrency industryâs growth. Stockholders, he said, donât have to delve into the nuances of individual tokens, given the industryâs notorious history of extreme price volatility. Â
âYouâre getting access to the digital crypto markets but youâre getting it through a publicly traded company that is trading on behalf of their customers,â Ehrlich said.Â
Ehrlich said some of Voyagerâs growth in the quarter has come from investors seeking quick gains from the fast-moving arena of decentralized finance, or DeFi, where programmers are using blockchain technology to build automated networks for lending and trading. Itâs a business that aspires to challenge traditional Wall Street firms with a cheaper and potentially more equitable model.
But he acknowledged that the DeFi tokens can be complicated and require âeducationâ efforts. The tokens often represent little-tested projects in hardly-established markets. Prices for Kyber Networkâs KNC token, traded on Voyager, have plunged 41% in the past month, though theyâre still roughly five times where they started the year.Â
âWe saw people kind of reallocate a little bit out of the DeFi and a couple other tokensâ amid a sell-off in the sector this week, he said.Â
Ehrlich said Voyager has no plans to put any of the companyâs corporate treasury into cryptocurrencies. Such a move was announced recently by publicly traded Microstrategy, which said it steered at least $425 million into bitcoin.Â
âOur investors want us to be that agency broker,â Ehrlich said. âThey want us to be the one that executes the trade in microseconds for customers, not making bets on coins one way or another.â
He added that he has encouraged some corporate executives wary of following Microstrategyâs bitcoin play to consider converting their cash into USD Coinâs dollar-linked USDC stablecoins, which can be deposited at Voyager for a 9.5% interest rate.Â