In this week’s news roundup, you’ll read about Quidax’s listing on CoinMarketCap, the crypto buying habits of South Africans, and more.
Quidax Becomes the First African Crypto Exchange to Get Listed on CoinMarketCap
Quidax, an African-founded crypto exchange, announced last week that its crypto markets had been listed on CoinMarketCap. CoinMarketCap is the world’s most-referenced price-tracking website for crypto assets.
The listing has made Quidax the first fully African-owned crypto exchange to get listed on CoinMarketCap signifying a huge milestone for the crypto ecosystem in Africa. Quidax in a press release mentioned that the listing is a great way for people to not only get reliable information on their offerings but that it also helps showcase how important Africa is to the crypto ecosystem.
“This is a proud moment for us as it allows us to provide reliable information on our crypto markets to the millions of people that rely on Coinmarket’s data,” said Uzo Awili, Quidax co-founder and Chief Technology Officer (CTO).
The news comes barely two months after the crypto exchange launched an updated crypto app that’s available for both Android and iOS users.
Luno Releases Data Showing the Habits of Crypto Buying South Africans
Data released by Luno on the crypto buying habits of South Africans has shown that the average crypto buyer from the country will be male and spends roughly R450 on their first purchase then HODLs onto it for close to eight months.
“South Africa is one of our strongest markets, in fact, South Africans make up about 43% of our verified customers. Over the past year, we verified more than 3 million new users worldwide. As we expand into new territories, the trend is starting to shift,” said Richard Ball, Lead Data Scientist at Luno.
According to the data, most South Africans will start buying crypto with a relatively small deposit, roughly R90 compared to their biggest local customers who start purchasing crypto at R1,500. The most popular crypto coins in South Africa are Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP with more customers buying than selling. While more men are buying crypto than women in South Africa within the age bracket of 18-29, more women are active on Luno than men in the 60+ age bracket.
Additionally, on buying behaviour, Ball said that customers who bought during price surges tend to be more speculative compared to customers who bought when the market was flat and thus end up being long-term investors.
African Crypto Startup, Basqet, Launches Payment Gateway to Allow Business Accept Bitcoin
Basqet, an African Blockchain payments startup, has launched its cryptocurrency payment gateway that will enable businesses accept Bitcoin and other digital currencies as payment.
The startup launched its public beta and will be going live and has 118 businesses that have already signed up to start accepting crypto payments such as Bitcoin among others. Before launching the beta version, Basqet revealed that it had already transacted about $1.3 million with just a handful of businesses.
Speaking about the launch of the crypto payment gateway, Bunmi Eleshin, Senior Product Manager at Basqet said, “We are creating a missing link between people who hold cryptocurrency and businesses who want to accept crypto as a means of payment, and we are doing it without merchants having to experience a loss due to crypto’s price volatility.”
Merchants who sign up during the beta launch will be able to accept crypto payments in three ways – payment button, payment link, and Basqet API. Basqet also mentioned that with the beta launch, merchants will be able to accept cryptos such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and USDT with plans to add more over the coming weeks.
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