Coinbase expanding India ops, several foreign exchanges looking to enter, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The status of cryptocurrency in India is in a grey area, but that has not stopped foreign crypto exchanges to stay bullish on the country.

Nasdaq-listed crypto exchange Coinbase is looking to expand its India operations. Its co-founder & CEO tweeted: “Coinbase is building out an office in India! Amazing team already in place — come join us.”

The plan

In a blogpost, In a blog post, the company’s VP Engineering and Site Lead of India Pankaj Gupta said, it is early days for the India tech hub, but “it has already taken off with an incredible amount of interest in our open roles from across India.”

“We want to hire hundreds of world-class engineers in the near term…To support our ambitious growth plans in India, we are also exploring startup acquisitions and acqui-hires.” he said.

He said as a product-led company, it’s important that it’s new in India truly understand the products and services that they are helping to deliver.

“That’s why we’re introducing a new program called offering each new employee in India a one-time $1,000 in crypto when they start,” he said.

The talents will have the option to work across various locations as the company is hiring for employees to work remotely. ”Given our remote-first strategy, we offer a truly flexible and modern work environment. That means that we’re hiring from all parts of India in order to find the best talent wherever they are or choose to work from in the country. We plan to complement this with physical offices in key cities as well to have a hybrid, flexible environment,” Gupta added.

As per the open positions as mentioned on its website here, while almost all are remote job postings (design, engineering, machine learning, HR & Recruiting) as of now, one is based in Hyderabad, India.

Coinbase, which was founded in 2012, offers a platform for users to buy and sell several cryptocurrencies.

Foreign firms

US-based Kraken, Hong Kong-based Bitfinex and KuCoin are actively scouting the Indian market. One of the companies had begun due diligence on an Indian firm while the other two were weighing options that include setting up a subsidiary or buying an Indian firm.

The three exchanges are ranked in the world’s top ten.

In 2019, Binance acquired WazirX, which has allowed users to buy and sell crypto with rupees on the Binance Fiat Gateway. US-based exchange, Coinbase, has announced plans for a back-office in India.



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Leading crypto exchanges scout entry into India despite potential ban

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Global digital currency exchanges are exploring ways to set up in India, following in the footsteps of market leader Binance, industry sources told Reuters, while the government in New Delhi dithers over introducing a law that could ban cryptocurrencies.

Opponents of the potential ban say it would stifle the economic power of a tech-savvy, young nation of 1.35 billion people. There is no official data, but industry analysts reckon there are 15 million crypto investors in India holding over ₹100 billion ($1.37 billion).

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According to four sources, who declined to be identified as they were not authorised to comment on private discussions, US-based Kraken, Hong Kong-based Bitfinex and rival KuCoin are actively scouting the market, which analysts say would only get bigger if it was given a free rein. “These companies have already begun talks to understand the Indian market and the entry points better,” said one source directly involved with an exchange that had begun due diligence for an Indian firm it was considering acquiring.

The other two exchanges, he said, were in the initial stages of deciding whether to enter India and weighing their options, which effectively come down to a choice between setting up a subsidiary or buying an Indian firm, as Binance, the world’s biggest exchange, did two years ago.

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Bitfinex declined to comment while Kraken and KuCoin did not respond to an email seeking comment.

All three exchanges are ranked in the world’s top ten by data platform CoinMarketCap, based on their traffic, liquidity and trustworthiness of their reported trading volumes.

“The Indian market is huge and it is only starting to grow, if there was more policy certainty by now Indian consumers would have been spoilt for choice in terms of exchanges, because everyone wants to be here,” said Kumar Gaurav, founder of digital bank Cashaa.

India must take a holistic view on cryptos

Proponents of cryptocurrencies say they would be the most cost-efficient way for Indians abroad to remit funds home.

But authorities worry that rich people and criminals could hide their wealth in the digital world, and speculative flows of funds through digital channels, ungoverned by India’s strict exchange controls, could destabilise the financial system.

Caution across globe

Hitherto, India has had no rules specifically for cryptocurrency exchanges wishing to set up in the country. Instead they could register themselves as tech companies to obtain a relatively easy entry path.

In 2019, Binance acquired WazirX, an Indian cryptocurrency start-up which has allowed users to buy and sell crypto with rupees on the Binance Fiat Gateway.

US based exchange Coinbase has announced plans for a back office in India.

But with the regulatory environment for cryptocurrencies taking a turn for worse globally, Indian authorities are exercising greater scrutiny.

In China, authorities have forbidden banks and online payment companies from providing services related to cryptocurrency transactions.

And the Indian government was set to present a Bill to Parliament by March that proposed a ban on cryptocurrencies, making trading and holding them illegal. But the government has held it back, and conflicting statements since have fuelled uncertainty over the Bill’s fate.

Meantime, major Indian banks have begun to sever ties with cryptocurrency exchanges and traders, amid Reserve Bank of India’s concerns about the financial stability risks posed by the volatile asset.

The RBI is looking at launching its own digital currency, but Governor Shaktikanta Das in February described those plans as a “work in progress”.

For all the uncertainty over what India will end up doing, some digital currency exchanges clearly reckon it would be better to gain entry rather than miss out.

“It’s clear that the rewards outweigh the perceived risks, which is luring these global firms to the Indian market,” said Darshan Bathija, chief executive officer of Vauld, a foreign crypto exchange with a presence in India.

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