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Five crypto and blockchain trends for 2020

Staff Writer
By Staff Writer, ITWeb
Johannesburg, 11 Dec 2019
Alexey Ermakov, CEO and founder of Aximetria
Alexey Ermakov, CEO and founder of Aximetria

Alexey Ermakov, CEO and founder of Swiss-based fintech startup Aximetria, has picked five crypto and blockchain trends to watch out for in 2020.

Erkamkov, a Russian entrepreneur,  launched Aximetria in early 2018. It is a mobile finance service, providing e-accounts for fiat and crypto-currencies, instant crypto exchange and global peer-to-per (P2P) money transfers.

“After the parabolic bull run of 2017, the last two years were pretty much a bearish phase. New lows were created, bounces and new projects were spread thinly apart,” he says. 

“As we look forward to 2020, expectations of another massive crypto rally, interesting projects, and the impending Bitcoin halving usher a new wave of enthusiasm among investors and developers alike.

"Now it is time for bigger and mature players to enter the industry. The new year will belong to more crypto adoption and better regulation.”

Decentralised Finance (DeFi), cross-border crypto payments regulated by governments, crypto-based gaming, and virtual reality, are some other interesting things to look forward to, he says.

Of the many exciting developments on the horizon, he highlights five trends to watch out for:

1. State and corporate crypto-currencies

Many countries, including UAE (Dubai), Japan, Sweden, Russia, Estonia and France, have announced their plans for a regulated state-issued crypto-currency. The list of countries pondering over this move is even longer. Countries wishing to move to digital payments and curb cash find crypto-currencies to be the best way forward.

Similarly, following Facebook’s Libra project proposal, many corporates are wondering whether issuing their own crypto-currencies would be the right move for them. Multinational corporations such as J. P. Morgan Chase, Walmart, AirAsia, Mitsubishi, Amazon, Nornickel and Tencent are looking to issues their own digital assets. 

This will mean less volatility and crypto-currencies will no longer be questioned for their intrinsic values. All of them will compete in an international open market.

2. Regulation

Many crypto exchanges and projects will face the wrath of regulators. This will result in exchanges shutting shops in certain jurisdictions, and de-listing of tokens and projects that do not follow the legal requirements and operate in a grey area.

3. Deanonymisation

Companies and governments alike are working on projects to deanonymise crypto payments.

The US government is already working on a project to develop forensic analysis tools for privacy-focused crypto-currencies, like Monero and ZCash.

4. Crypto purchases with Fiat

With crypto spreading to the masses, it would become easier to buy Bitcoin and other crypto-currencies with fiat money.

This could be done through peopole who already own crypto or through a growing network of crypto ATMs. Just like we use our bank accounts, our crypto wallets would provide us access to cash through various crypto ATMs. As virtual currency ATMs become ubiquitous, it would be interesting to see people purchase digital assets with cash.

Also, the resistance to imposed government restrictions and other obstacles will create new DeFi-based P2P currency exchange platforms. These platforms will offer their services through mobile finance mediums and will enable any user to become an agent and exchange crypto for cash directly with their peers, safely from anywhere in the world.

5. Fintech moving to Switzerland

Switzerland has been Europe’s finance hub for the last century and the country does not plan to give up that status anytime soon.

Swiss regulation is friendlier for fintech startups, and crypto projects. We can see early signs of the already flourishing Swiss fintech industry. I believe Switzerland is poised to become the fintech hub in 2020.

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