Venmo – the PayPal-owned peer-to-peer payment service, earlier in the day, said that it had started allowing users to buy, hold and sell crypto-currencies on its app
WeWork – the SoftBank-backed office-sharing start-up said that it would begin accepting payments is select crypto-currencies and partner with Coinbase Global Inc. and payment app Bitpay to facilitate transactions.
Prompting the move away from the fringes of finance for crypto-currencies like bitcoin, WeWork joins a clutch of high-profile firms that have dived into the digital currency space recently that includes Tesla Inc., Visa Inc. and Bank of NY Mellon.
Using crypto-currencies, Visa Inc. said last month it would allow payment settlements, while PayPal Holdings Inc. launched a crypto checkout service on March 30.
The biggest crypto-currency – Bitcoin reached a record high last week, ahead of the trading debut of the US crypto-currency exchange Coinbase, but its rally has since cooled off.
Also, by investors seeking high-yielding assets amid low interest, the multi-fold rise in the value of crypto-currencies has been driven.
Venmo – the PayPal-owned peer-to-peer payment service, earlier in the day, said that it had started allowing users to buy, hold and sell crypto-currencies on its app.
WeWork agreed to go public late last month through a merger with a blank-check firm in a deal that values the start-up at $9 billion. SoftBank Group Corp said it would retain a majority stake in the company after the merger.
Also read:Robots becoming an important part of the marketing industry
Do Follow: CIO News LinkedIn Account | CIO News Facebook | CIO News Youtube | CIO News Twitter