STRIPE TO START ACCEPTING BITCOIN PAYMENT SUPPORT
Stripe, the firm which helps
more than 100,000 businesses do financial transactions online, is to scrap
support for Bitcoin payments.
It said Bitcoin
users now saw the virtual currency largely as an "asset" to be
traded, rather than something to make payments with.
Fewer online
merchants wanted to accept the cryptocurrency, it added.
Rising fees and
longer transaction times as a result of price fluctuations also lessened its
appeal, Stripe said.
'Expensive'
Customers of the
US-based payments firm pay a fee to Stripe each time it processes a payment.
Clients include Lyft, Deliveroo, Grab and Target.
In 2014, it became
the first major payments company to support Bitcoin payments.
At the time Stripe
said it hoped Bitcoin would become a way for people in places with low credit
card penetration or prohibitively high credit card fees to do transactions
online.
But the virtual
currency was now "better-suited to being an asset than being a means of
exchange," it said.
There has been a
huge surge of interest in the digital currency over the past year or so, driven
largely by its rapid increase in price.
But that demand has
also led to huge swings in price, with Stripe saying the volatility meant the
time needed to complete a sale had risen.
"By the time
the transaction is confirmed, fluctuations in Bitcoin price mean that it's for
the 'wrong' amount," Stripe's product manager Tom Karlo said in his blog.
Bitcoin transaction
fees had also risen "a great deal" resulting in a decrease in demand from
Stripe's customers to accept Bitcoin payments, he said.
"For a regular
Bitcoin transaction, a fee of tens of US dollars is common, making Bitcoin
transactions about as expensive as bank wires," Mr Karlo wrote.
"Because of
this, we've seen the desire from our customers to accept Bitcoin decrease. And
of the businesses that are accepting Bitcoin on Stripe, we've seen their
revenues from Bitcoin decline substantially."
Giving up on cryptocurrencies?
Stripe said it would
start winding down its support for Bitcoin immediately and would stop all
transactions by 23 April.
But it said its
decision to end support for Bitcoin payments did not mean it was giving up on
cryptocurrencies all together.
"We're
interested in what's happening with Lightning and other proposals to enable
faster payments," Mr Karlo said.
"OmiseGO is an
ambitious and clever proposal; more broadly, Ethereum continues to spawn many
high-potential projects."
News Source : BBC
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