PayPal

Crypto payments: PayPal’s stablecoin ripple effect on markets

Earlier this year, PayPal released its own stablecoin. What effect has it had on crypto adoption?

PayPal’s introduction of its native stablecoin, PayPal USD (PYUSD), has sparked heated debates within the crypto industry regarding its possible sway on payments and wider crypto adoption.

While this step seems to be a big jump toward accepting cryptocurrencies in regular finance, some industry observers advise caution.

What is PYUSD?

This initiative aims to bridge the fiat and digital currency realms for consumers, merchants and developers. PayPal CEO Dan Schulman highlighted the need for a stable digital-fiat conduit.

“The shift toward digital currencies requires a stable instrument that is both digitally native and easily connected to fiat currency like the U.S. Our commitment to responsible innovation and compliance, and our track record delivering new experiences to our customers, provides the foundation necessary to contribute to the growth of digital payments through PayPal USD.” 

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PayPal and the credit card industry are taking advantage of consumers

Stablecoins offer a way for consumers — particularly Americans — to escape the financial industry’s punitive transaction fees.

As rising prices have forced consumers all over the world to reduce their spending and find new ways of coping with the increased cost of living, consumers are finding themselves relying on credit cards even more than they already were. 

More Americans are unable to pay their credit card bills in full at the end of the month, with 46% of credit cardholders carrying month-to-month debt, up from 39% in 2022. A recent report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York highlighted how the current 15% year-to-year credit card balance increase represents the largest jump in more than 20 years.

It’s undeniable that ordinary people are facing higher prices across the board, and are increasingly unable to make credit card payments. That’s because payments giants like PayPal are taking advantage of consumers, and we’ve all been letting them get away with it.

As credit card spending in the United States almost entirely benefits Visa and Mastercard, who handle 80% of total transactions, the failure of the competitive model in the credit card industry may be to blame for at least part of the crisis at hand

Related: Did regulators intentionally cause a run on banks?

But that’s not all: With the highest credit card swipe fees of any major economy, American businesses pay up to seven times more in swipe fees than businesses in Europe, and five times more than businesses in China — a cost that gets passed down directly to consumers. In order to avoid shouldering transaction costs, merchants are forced to set higher prices than they would prefer — that’s prices for all consumers, not just those choosing to pay by credit card — which essentially means that anyone paying by cash or debit card is forced to pay a higher price for the convenience of a select few.

It’s true that electronic payments are convenient, and they’ve solved many of the cross-border problems posed by an old cash-only mentality. However, consumers end up paying a lot more for this comfort than they might have been led to believe, and they might not even know it.

In 2023, the technology at our disposal is so advanced that centralized services imposing limits on merchants’ or customers’ rights to send and spend simply should not exist.

Why, in today’s world, should anyone be forced to use a centralized service that is specifically designed to take such a big cut of their every purchase?

By replacing old systems and traditional payment providers — which serve the greater monopoly rather than hard-working ordinary people — distributed solutions can save consumers and merchants more money. In order to do this in a safe and transparent fashion, however, volatility cannot be a part of the equation, which means traditional cryptocurrencies cannot be the answer. But stablecoins could be.

Stablecoins are specifically designed for price continuity, as the name suggests. Their value is directly tied, or pegged, to a “stable” reserve asset, like a precious metal or the U.S. dollar, so their price is ultimately fixed. By allowing for real-time payments over blockchain networks, they offer faster and more efficient money movement than their fiat counterparts. With a more concrete value proposition for everyday use, they represent a more effective alternative to more highly volatile cryptocurrencies.

But with some stablecoins going as far as offering 99% cheaper fees for consumers and merchants compared to what the current global payment solution providers offer, they also represent a good way out of our dependency on credit cards as a whole.

In a 2021 speech, the Federal Reserve Board’s vice chairman for supervision, Randal Quarles, invited us to “not fear stablecoins,” as their potential benefits should be taken into “strong account,” and “the possibility that a U.S. dollar stablecoin might support the role of the dollar in the global economy.” Elsewhere in the world, things are moving in a similar direction. For example, the Digital Euro Association sees “automated micropayments as a way for Europe to maintain its digital competitiveness.”

The solution may be found in stablecoins themselves or in the mix between traditional financial structures and the innovations of Web3, and it could be easier to implement than we might think.

Related: Bank collapses are spurring interest in self-custody startups

Since merchants may be reluctant to build up the necessary crypto knowledge they would need to accept stablecoins, they could instead look to providers who would allow them to both accept stablecoins as a currency, and get settled into bankable fiat currency without the need to change accounting procedures. The stablecoin provider could add value, security and transparency to its proposition by getting the stamp of approval of something like a bank guarantee, in which case the value of the stablecoin in question would be fully protected, and consumers’ peace of mind would be assured.

The important thing to remember is that both merchants and consumers — sick of a system keeping them hostage — are desperate for innovative solutions to a crisis that’s been left unchecked for simply too long. To this end, the mainstream use of stablecoins as a means of payment does have the potential to save us from our dependency on the credit card industry and even drive down gouged consumer prices. Their value proposition shouldn’t be overlooked.

What will it take to implement a cheaper, more efficient and straightforward way to conduct business? Are we resigned to letting ourselves be taken advantage of? If the answer is no, then stablecoins and other low-fee Web3 solutions may be where we need to start.

Bernhard Müller is the founder, chairman and general manager at Centi. After a 10-year career in healthcare engineering, he worked for a global blockchain company in business development and compliance. He holds an M.Sc. in biology and started following Bitcoin in 2011.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph

PayPal co-leads $20M seed funding for on-chain risk optimizer Chaos Labs

Chaos Labs protects crypto protocols against external exploits and risks with an automated risk management platform.

Payments giant PayPal and investment management firm Galaxy joined hands to raise $20 million in seed funding for Chaos Labs, a New York-based cloud platform for securing blockchains and protocols.

With an automated risk management platform, Chaos Labs protects crypto protocols against external exploits and risks. The platform does this by offering agent and scenario-based simulations, which helps secure protocols against economic vulnerabilities and market manipulation events.

The seed funding is aimed at helping Chaos Labs further automate on-chain risk optimization. 

The funding round saw participation from 23 organizations and six angel investors. Prominent names among the lot include Coinbase Ventures, Polygon, Avalanche, OpenSea UniSwap and Balaji Srinivasan.

Participants of Chaos Labs’ seed funding. Source: Chaos Labs

According to Chaos Labs’ founder and CEO, Omer Goldberg, financial risk management must be upgraded to cater to the decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystems. He added:

“We believe that every DeFi protocol must regularly conduct robust risk testing to verify and validate that their economic system is secure against hackers and unanticipated volatility.”

The official website states that Chaos Labs’ risk suite can help protect DeFi protocols through optimized risk and capital efficiency, streamlined risk assessments and streamlined risk assessments.

Related: MetaMask to allow users to purchase and transfer Ethereum via PayPal

PayPal’s interest in the crypto ecosystem was highlighted when the company was found to be holding a significant part of its financial liabilities in cryptocurrencies offered to its customers.

As Cointelegraph reported, by the end of 2022, PayPal held a total of $604 million in various cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), Litecoin (LTC) and Bitcoin Cash (BCH). The information was found on the annual report filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on Feb. 10.

Bitcoin accounts for $291 million in the firm’s asset breakdown, with $250 million in ETH. The remaining $63 million includes Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash combined.

Ethereum’s $1.5K support weakens as ETH traders turn slightly bearish

ETH derivatives data shows bulls becoming less inclined to defend the current price level, creating an opportunity for more downside.

The price of Ether (ETH) declined 10.2% between Jan. 8 and Jan. 10, and has since been range trading near the $1,500 level. More importantly, on a broader time frame, Ether is down 52.5% in twelve months, which partially explains why derivatives metrics were somewhat neutral after Ether’s failed attempt to break $1,700 on Feb. 8.

Currently, investors’ biggest concerns are the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s lawsuits and enforcement actions against crypto firms, including Kraken’s tanking its staking-as-a-service program and PayPal reportedly pausing its stablecoin project due to regulatory concerns.

A crackdown by the SEC on crypto staking is expected to have unintended consequences for decentralized finance, according to Jacob Blish, the head of business development at Lido DAO. Blish joined a growing number of people in the crypto industry calling for transparency in crypto sector regulation.

On the bright side, Ethereum developers announced the pre-launch of the Shanghai upgrade on the Zhejiang testnet. According to a blog post on Feb. 10, the transition is required to enable withdrawals from validators’ staking positions. The Zhejiang test network is the first of three testnets that simulate Shanghai, which is expected to go live in March, although a specific date has not been released.

Let’s look at Ether derivatives data to understand if the $1,700 price rejection has impacted crypto investors’ sentiment.

ETH futures show slowing demand for leverage longs

Retail traders usually avoid quarterly futures due to their price difference from spot markets. Professional traders prefer these instruments because they prevent the fluctuation of funding rates in a perpetual futures contract.

The three-month futures annualized premium should trade between 4% to 8% in healthy markets to cover costs and associated risks. However, when futures trade at a discount versus regular spot markets, it shows a lack of confidence from leverage buyers, which is a bearish indicator.

Ether 3-month futures annualized premium. Source: Laevitas

The above chart shows that derivatives traders are more bearish because the Ether futures premium moved below the 4% threshold. Consequently, bears can celebrate that the indicator failed to display a modest premium even as ETH tested $1,700 on Feb. 8.

The absence of demand for leverage longs does not necessarily translate to an expectation of adverse price action. Hence, traders should analyze Ether’s options markets to understand how whales and market makers are pricing the odds of future price movements.

A key options risk metric flirted with the bearish sentiment

The 25% delta skew is a telling sign when market makers and arbitrage desks are overcharging for upside or downside protection.

In bear markets, options investors give higher odds for a price dump, causing the skew indicator to rise above 10%. On the other hand, bullish markets tend to drive the skew metric below -10%, meaning the bearish put options are in less demand.

Related: US lawmakers and experts debate SEC’s role in crypto regulation

Ether 30-day options 25% delta skew: Source: Laevitas.ch

The delta skew flirted with the bearish 10% level on Feb. 14, signaling stress from professional traders. That is a stark contrast from late January when the 25% skew index hovered near 2% — indicating similar upside and downside risks.

Ultimately, both options and futures markets point to pro traders moving to a neutral-to-bearish sentiment, displaying moderate discomfort after the $1,700 price rejection.

Consequently, the odds favor Ether bears because the hostile regulatory environment tends to amplify the adverse effects of FUD — whether or not it directly impacts the Ethereum network’s adoption and use cases.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

PayPal held $604M in Bitcoin and other crypto at the end of 2022

BTC and ETH have the largest share in PayPal’s crypto assets, accounting for $291 million and $250 million in the asset breakdown, respectively.

Global payment giant PayPal holds a significant part of its financial liabilities in cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin (BTC) offered to its customers.

As of Dec. 31, PayPal held a total of $604 million in various cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin, Ether (ETH), Litecoin (LTC) and Bitcoin Cash (BCH), according to the annual report filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on Feb. 10.

Bitcoin has the largest share in PayPal’s crypto assets, accounting for $291 million in the firm’s asset breakdown, while $250 million is held in ETH. The remaining $63 million includes Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash combined.

The amount of PayPal’s crypto holdings accounts for 67% of the company’s total financial liabilities, amounting to $902 million as of Dec. 31. PayPal’s total financial assets stood at more than $25 billion, according to the filing.

Despite introducing cryptocurrencies onto its platform more than two years ago, PayPal did not include a similar breakdown of crypto holdings in its previous annual financial report.

“Due to the unique risks associated with cryptocurrencies, including technological, legal, and regulatory risks, we recognize a crypto asset safeguarding liability to reflect our obligation to safeguard the crypto assets held for the benefit of our customers,” PayPal wrote in the recent filing.

Related: PayPal Xoom adds cross-border remittance on debit card deposit

PayPal stores customers’ cryptocurrencies through a third-party custodian, the company noted in the filing. PayPal stressed that it contractually requires the custodian to segregate customer assets and not mix them with proprietary or other assets, adding:

“We cannot be certain that these contractual obligations, even if duly observed by the custodian, will be effective in preventing such assets from being treated as part of the custodian’s estate under bankruptcy or other insolvency law.”

As previously reported, PayPal debuted its hold-and-sell service for Bitcoin in the United States in November 2020. The company has been doing its best to bring all possible blockchain and crypto integrations to its services, including central bank digital currencies, according to vice president Richard Nash.

PayPal has become an episode of Black Mirror: Elon Musk

The “PayPal Mafia,” including co-founders Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, have slammed the payments platform over its “totalitarian” debanking policies.

PayPal’s former leadership, known as the “PayPal Mafia,” have slammed the payments giant for its debanking policies of late, with one co-founder calling the freezing of funds “totalitarian,” while another compared it to an episode of Black Mirror.

Despite becoming crypto-friendly in recent years, the payments tech giant has caught a lot of headlines and pushback over its de-platforming practices, which reportedly involve a rather abrupt process of freezing funds, fines and frosty negotiations to unlock the accounts of its users for varying reasons.

Peter Thiel, who co-founded PayPal in 1998 and served as its CEO until 2002, suggested to The Free Press on Dec. 14 that the company’s vision has significantly shifted away from its initial goal of giving global citizens greater control over their money.

“If the online forms of your money are frozen, that’s like destroying people economically, limiting their ability to exercise their political voice,” Thiel noted, adding that:

“There’s something about destroying people economically that seems like a far more totalitarian thing.”

Thiel is colloquially referred to as the “don” of the famous “PayPal Mafia,” a group of founders and former employees — such as Elon Musk — that have since gone on to found or work at other major tech companies.

Fellow PayPal Mafia member and the firm’s first chief operating officer, David Sacks, has also spoken out against PayPal’s deplatforming practices in recent years as well.

In talking with The Free Press, Sacks argued that under the leadership of current CEO Dan Schulman, PayPal is trying to cash in on the woke culture movement by banning people with opposing views.

“The CEO [Schulman] has got like every woke award you can win,” Sacks said, adding:

“It’s a symbiotic relationship — he implements their agenda, and, in exchange, they give him awards, and that furthers advancement up the corporate totem pole of woke capitalism.”

To list just some of PayPal’s notable deplatformings, it has shut down the accounts tied to the censorship-free focused Freedom Phone startup; news website Consortium News; the Free Speech Union; and lockdown sceptic blog The Daily Sceptic. All of these outletscould be deemed as leaning right politically, or at least as holding alternative views.

Responding to the article, Musk, the now-CEO of Twitter and CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, said that the platform has become likan episode of Black Mirror — a British television series that usually presents some form of dystopian future where people are controlled by technology.

Given the threat of deplatforming for some, crypto proponents have of course pushed the “Bitcoin fixes this” narrative due to the network’s decentralization and censorship resistance.

Related: What are crypto payment gateways and how do they work?

In October, PayPal also controversially introduced $2,500 fines for users who “promote misinformation” or spread material that presents risks to “user safety and wellbeing,” both of which were defined in ambiguous terms.

The move was met with intense backlash from the community and big figures alike, including PayPal Mafia members such as Musk and former PayPal president David Marcus. On Oct. 11, PayPal then promptly walked back that policy, attributingit to an internal error.

However, some skeptics believe the policy has been quietly snuck back into the company’s user agreement and acceptable use policy.

Business owners should get off PayPal and move to the blockchain

Cryptocurrency platforms offer lower fees and more convenience than their corporate competitors. That’s a boon for entrepreneurs.

Do you believe that in five years every second transaction in e-commerce will be settled on blockchain? No? Well, that’s what people thought of plastic credit cards versus cash a few decades ago when it came to traditional stores. 

There is no doubt that Web3 will drastically transform the way e-commerce operates. Using cryptocurrency payments in e-commerce stores will become just as common as accepting PayPal, Klarna, Visa or Mastercard. Stores that don’t adapt their e-commerce platforms to accept cryptocurrencies will soon find themselves out of business.

How Web3 has changed the e-commerce landscape

Thanks to the converging forces of Web3 — blockchain, decentralized finance (DeFi), AI and machine learning — new, smart algorithms can analyze and adapt to provide user-centric experiences. In addition, Web3 will be much more inclusive than previous versions of the Web. The decentralized nature of Web3 creates the perfect platform for the fast and transparent flow of information that’s not subject to censorship by a central authority.

In addition, Web3 eliminates intermediaries like Facebook that take a cut of users’ cash (and personal data) when they buy something online. At the same time, all the details of our transactions are public — for better or worse. Enhancing the security and convenience of online transactions will increase the volume of e-commerce transactions and encourage businesses to adopt crypto payments.

Related: Latin America is ready for crypto — Just integrate it with their payment systems

As more businesses move from Web2 to Web3, many merchants and consumers have begun using crypto payment solutions.

In Web2, most online payment platforms such as PayPal and Stripe charge transaction fees of around 4%. This, of course, makes it difficult for businesses to stay competitive without raising prices. Not only are crypto payments frictionless, but they’re also gaining traction as a payment method. With stablecoins today, people no longer have to worry about converting to fiat and the hassle of withdrawing funds to their bank accounts.

The power of blockchain in old and new business models

Similar to the Web2 e-commerce adoption, there’s a long road ahead before Web3 can provide the full range of benefits mentioned earlier. However, the introduction of smart contracts and Web3 platforms like Hyperledger has drastically changed the landscape of value exchange. Hyperledger Fabric was developed by enterprises like IBM for specific business cases that optimize supply chain operations. Access to the ledger using Fabric allows businesses to view the same unchangeable data, which guarantees accountability and minimizes the chance of counterfeiting.

Consumers can keep up with the progress of their orders and trace each item back to its origin. At the same time, supply chain operators can monitor inventory levels and shipments, take appropriate action to resolve issues and detect fraud. This allows the consumer and the company to expect delivery at a certain time. All of the packages can be easily monitored via the blockchain explorer while protecting the customer’s privacy.

Additionally, with blockchain, a global whitelist of genuine or reliable customers and vendors can be created and owned, something that Unstoppable Domains is doing with its identity verification for Web3. Such a whitelist reduces false positives and helps detect actual fraud. Unlike traditional e-commerce payments, Web3 allows people to place their orders easily by eliminating intermediaries and chargebacks.

A new regulatory environment

The advent of Web3 in e-commerce will change compliance requirements related to personal data, including the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, raising important questions such as identity authentication without revealing personal, sensitive information.

However, Web3 developers already experiment with the use of zero-knowledge proofs as the solution to prove to the other party that they are in possession of certain information (such as nationality or age above the limit) without actually revealing the details.

It is not necessarily going to be up to clients to decide how much personal data they’re going to give. That is only going to happen if companies adopt the applicable technology and regulators allow it. However, that may not happen unless someone is willing to make an argument in favor of it.

Related: PayPal enables transfer of digital currencies to external wallets

With such vast possibilities, more businesses should be considering jumping on the Web3 bandwagon. After all, they can elevate their transparency, reputation, and cost management in the e-commerce game to stay ahead of the curve while moving digital data safely and freely across borders. For that to happen, clear regulations must be devised to support the broader adoption of blockchain technology in this space.

Companies would also have an instrumental role to play in the world of Web3: ensuring that they are equipped with the latest security solutions to prevent themselves from becoming the target of cybercriminals. Recent occurrences of cyber crimes have seen hackers making away with funds, as well as the personal private information of customers, which inevitably leads to reputational damage to the organization.

Having the latest tools and systems would mean little without having a sufficiently staffed team of information security professionals to ensure that key systems vulnerabilities are addressed on a timely basis, and key controls are subject to testing on a regular basis. Adequate resources and attention would definitely have to be devoted by Web3 companies in order to address these areas of risk in the course of their business.

Raymond Hsu is a co-founder and the CEO of Cabital, a cryptocurrency wealth management platform. Prior to co-founding Cabital in 2020, Raymond worked for fintech and traditional banking institutions, including Citibank, Standard Chartered, eBay and Airwallex.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

PayPal adds to list of crypto heavy hitters on the TRUST network

PayPal has stepped up its regulatory compliance by joining TRUST to streamline its reporting requirements relating to the digital assets “travel rule.”

Crypto-friendly digital payments giant PayPal has been added to the Travel Rule Universal Solution Technology (TRUST) network, joining a host of big names in crypto that have moved to comply with digital asset travel rules.

The announcement comes two months after the payments giant rolled out infrastructure enabling users to transfer, send and receive digital assets between PayPal and other wallets and exchanges in June this year. Prior to that, users were only able to buy and sell crypto within PayPal, following the firm’s initial jump into the sector in October 2020.

TRUST was launched by a group of 18 United States virtual asset service providers (VASPs) in February, with heavy hitters such as Coinbase, Paxos, Circle, Kraken and Robinhood participating from the get-go. The number has since expanded to 38 now that PayPal has joined the ranks.

“The addition of PayPal marks another milestone in TRUST’s journey to become the global, industry-standard solution for Travel Rule compliance,” Coinbase noted in a Tuesda announcement.

Under the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) rule 31, more commonly known as the Travel rule, U.S. VASPs are legally required to pass on specific information relating to customer fund transfers from one financial institution to another. The threshold for identifying fund transfers, and the people behind them, start at $1,000.

As such, the group of U.S. VASPs launched TRUST to streamline reporting and make the sharing of information between them easier and more transparent. TRUST utilizes a solution that is composed of two main features; a centralized bulletin board to identify each VASP party on both ends of a transaction and an encrypted point-to-point (P2P) channel to securely exchange data.

Related: Self-regulatory orgs for crypto keep ecosystem afloat pending clear regulations

The group was formed in response to a recommendation from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in June 2021 for VASPs across the globe to adopt specific principles in order to maintain compliance with Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Counter-Terrorist Financing (CTF) policies.

75% of retailers eyeing crypto payments within 24 months: Deloitte

Improving customer experience, increasing the customer base and the hope their brand is perceived as “cutting edge” were the biggest reasons given for a desire to adopt crypto payments.

Three-quarters of United States retailers plan to accept crypto or stablecoin payments within the next two years, according to a new survey published by Deloitte.

It also found that more than half of large retailers with revenues over $500 million are currently spending $1 million or more building the required infrastructure to make it happen.

The information was revealed in Deloitte’s “Merchants Getting Ready For Crypto” report released in collaboration with PayPal on Wednesday.

A large majority, around 85%, of the surveyed merchants said they anticipate that cryptocurrency payments will be ubiquitous in their respective industries in five years.

The survey polled 2,000 senior executives at U.S. retail organizations between December 3 and December 16, 2021, when crypto prices were still riding high, but the results have only just been revealed. The executives were distributed equally among the cosmetics, digital goods, electronics, fashion, food and beverages, home and garden, hospitality and leisure, personal and household goods, services and transportation sectors.

Small- to medium-sized companies are also getting into the acts, with 73% of retailers with revenues between $10 million and $100 million investing between $100,000 to $1 million to support the needed infrastructure.

Source: Merchants Getting Ready for Crypto: Merchant Adoption of Digital Currency Payments Survey

According to Deloitte, the spending won’t stop there and is only expected to increase over 2022. More than 60% of retailers said they expect budgets of more than $500,000 to enable crypto payments in the next 12 months to December.

Consumers push for crypto payments

Consumer interest is driving merchant adoption, with 64% of merchants signaling their customers have expressed significant interest in using crypto for payments. Roughly 83% of retailers expect interest to increase or significantly increase over 2022.

Source: Merchants Getting Ready for Crypto: Merchant Adoption of Digital Currency Payments Survey

Nearly half expect their adoption of cryptocurrency will improve the customer experience, around the same amount believe it will increase their customer base, and 40% hoped their brand would be perceived as “cutting edge.”

Related: Corporate evolution: How adoption is changing crypto company structures

Retailers optimistic on digital currencies

Of the retailers already accepting cryptocurrency, 93% have reported a positive impact on their customer metrics.

Source: Merchants Getting Ready for Crypto: Merchant Adoption of Digital Currency Payments Survey

Carriers and challenges to adoption cited by merchants include the security of the payments system (43%) changing regulations (37%), volatility (36%) and a lack of a budget (30%).

The complexity of integrating cryptocurrencies with legacy systems and the complexity of integrating multiple cryptos was the greatest challenge, according to 45% of the surveyed merchants.

Deloitte said it expects “continued education” would create further clarity for regulators, allowing wider adoption across a broader set of products and services.

PayPal enables transfer of digital currencies to external wallets

The move comes after nearly two years since PayPal enabled users to buy and sell crypto on its platform.

After rolling out the ability to buy and sell crypto on its platform in October 2020, PayPal is finally allowing users the ability to natively transfer, send and receive digital assets between PayPal and other wallets and exchanges. As of Tuesday, the feature is available to select U.S. users, with the feature expanding to all eligible U.S. users in the coming weeks. The first batch of supported coins consists of Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Litecoin (LTC). 

In addition, customers who transfer their crypto onto PayPal can spend it via Checkout at millions of merchant terminals. The company has been granted a full Bitlicense by the New York Department of Financial Services for the conduct.

Users would simply need to log in to their accounts and enter the crypto section of the application to start transferring transfer coins. Users are generally required to complete a one-time ID verification before the procedure.

Crypto transfers to recipients outside of PayPal would incur a network fee based on their respective blockchains, but transfers between PayPal users will not incur such fees. To protect users’ privacy, the firm generates a new recipient address for each transaction into one’s PayPal account. PayPal will also not charge fees for incoming transfers,

The company is also working to integrate other forms of cryptocurrency services, such as central bank digital currencies, to boost its digital footprint. It is also exploring the possibility of launching its own stablecoin, dubbed “PayPal Coin.” The discovery came after a developer found evidence of such a stablecoin within the source code of the company’s iPhone app.