A new cryptocurrency exchange is set to launch with no-fee trading – and it’s got some notable backers behind it.
To start, Voyager plans to list 15 cryptocurrencies, drawn from the list of the 25 best-performing networks, including bitcoin, ethereum and bitcoin cash, among others.
Voyager also intends to add support for crypto news and analysis, as well as additional tools for the institutional investor segment.
According to Voyager, the exchange is in the process of securing licenses in U.S. states.
“We don’t think crypto has been adopted yet by the masses in the United States,” Ehrlich was quoted as saying.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is facing criticism for its recent filing on the FTX bankruptcy, echoing its controversial approach in the Voyager case. In a recent filing, the SEC warned the FTX estate that it may oppose plans to…
Bankrupt firm Voyager Digital has announced that it has successfully recovered $484.35 million from FTX, Three Arrows Capital (3AC), and Directors and Officers (D&O) insurance settlements. The announcement on April 10 was part of a comprehensive status update to the United States…
Co-founder of Voyager Digital Stephen Ehrlich faces charges from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for alleged fraud and failing to register with the agency.
The simple business model of making money on the spread between lending and interest paid to users seems sound, especially if the loans are over-collateralized and issued to trustworthy parties. The practice of lending can be traced back over 5,000 years to 3000 BC in ancient Mesopotamia; cryptocurrency lending is just an evolution.
The U. S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) investigators have determined that Stephen Ehrlich, a co-founder of Voyager Digital, violated derivatives regulations before the company’s bankruptcy last year, Bloomberg reported on Oct.