Australian
multi-service bitcoin company digitalBTC will make history today as the
first bitcoin-focused company to trade on a major mainstream stock
exchange.
DigitalBTC, which began as a mining operation but also
engages in bitcoin trading and is developing retail and consumer
applications, debuted on the Australian Securities Exchange (
ASX) this morning as Digital CC Limited (trading as digitalBTC; ASX code: DCC).
The ASX has a
daily turnover of over AUD$4.6bn (US$4.32bn) and a market cap of around AUD$1.6tn.
Credibility rewards
The
company views its new listing as crucial to building trust in a
consumer bitcoin firm. Trust is a huge issue in the bitcoin world, and
scandals involving some of its biggest names were seen as a turn-off for
investors outside the bitcoin realm.
Legal requirements for the listing will make
digitalBTC “the most transparent bitcoin company around”, according to a spokesperson.
The
listing opens doors to a different breed of investor than might
normally put money into a bitcoin company: more risk-averse individual
and institutional investors and, digitalBTC hopes, those with a lot more
money to invest.
The path to listing
DigitalBTC has technically been listed on the ASX since its ‘reverse takeover’ and transformation of
Macro Energy Limited back in March, but has pursued the extra legitimacy of its own listing since then, which required approval.
Its
backers at the time, consisting of “institutions and high net worth
people”, committed AUD$9.1m (US$8.55m) to the deal at an effective price
of $0.20 per share.
Since then, digitalBTC’s mining operations
have earned over 5,100 BTC and its established trading desk revenues had
returns of 34% in May, up from 31% in April.
Final approval
The
reverse takeover meant that Macro Energy officially acquired
digitalBTC, giving the company a faster track to the exchange listing.
Investors could buy shares in Macro, but the digitalBTC name was
necessary to indicate the company’s true business and gain value.
Trading
has been suspended for the past three weeks while an ASX listing
officer reviewed and approved the final paperwork, which is now
complete.
The company has also lodged a prospectus with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (
ASIC).
Bitcoin vs ‘real’ exchanges
Observers
will be keen to see what happens to digitalBTC’s share price. Most
bitcoin startups, where listed, trade on bitcoin-only and ‘unofficial’
stock exchanges, which operate in a regulatory
grey area.
Just last week, SatoshiDICE and FeedZeBirds founder Erik Voorhees was
fined $35,000 and forced to relinquish profits of almost $16,000 resulting from his offering of securities in the two firms.
Uncertainty
surrounding crytpocurrency exchange listings is likely keeping
mainstream investors at bay, at least until rules are properly
clarified.
Reporting requirements
A major stock exchange
listing also brings with it a raft of extra reporting and transparency
requirements hitherto unknown to the bitcoin world. Among them are
quarterly cashflow reports and six-monthly audited accounts, and should
any legally-defined ‘material’ issue arise, it must be disclosed
immediately.
DigitalBTC founder and now Executive Chairman, Mr
Zhenya Tsvetnenko, said he was very pleased with the extensive progress
made between March and finalizing the official launch today.
“We’ve
made a great start for digitalBTC, aggressively expanding our early
bitcoin-focused operations, for some very good results. So much so that
we are now one of the largest bitcoin miners in the world,” he said.
“What
we really look forward to now is the success we can generate from
development of our bitcoin retail consumer product line, as digital
currencies such as bitcoin continue their explosive growth. Our
successful early operation’s growth positions us well to support our
future development activities in the digital currency sector, and I look
forward to the updates we can bring shareholders and the market in the
coming months.”
DigitalBTC also has a hardware partnership with
BitFury, which recently
announced a $20m funding round of its own.
Bitcoin’s march in Australia
Bitcoin
and similar currencies are well on the way to mainstream acceptance in
Australia, both at a corporate and official level.
Australian digital currency businesses also recently launched the The Australian Digital Currency Commerce Association (
ADCCA),
a body intended to function as a professional chamber of commerce for
any companies involved in bitcoin either directly or indirectly,
including bitcoin-using merchants and potentially even banks.
It would work in partnership with broader advocacy groups for bitcoin itself, like the Bitcoin Foundation-affiliated
Bitcoin Association of Australia.
Tax rules
The Australian Tax Office (ATO) has also announced its
intention
to release official taxation guidelines for bitcoin businesses and
investors, probably before the end of the current Australian financial
year on 30th June.
Although the local Bitcoin Association has published its own
recommendations in anticipation, the ATO has not yet revealed its policy.
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