Coinbase-Backed Stablecoin Startup Reserve to Launch 'Venmo Style App' in Venezuela

Published on by Cointele | Published on

Stablecoin project Reserve announced that it will launch a crypto-fiat payments app in Venezuela and Angola in a press release shared with Cointelegraph on May 12.

In the same announcement, the firm revealed that it is listing its separate utility token, Reserve Rights, on major exchange Huobi Global's token sale platform, Houbi Prime.

Per the press release, the project's stablecoin app - to be launched for Android users via Google Play "In the coming weeks" - will enable people and businesses to switch back and forth from their local fiat currency to the firm's stablecoin, the Reserve Dollar.

"A lot of people, including some of our investors, discouraged us from starting in Venezuela. [.] The hyperinflation there is the exact problem that Reserve is built to fix, and Venezuela is suffering the most inflation of anywhere in the world right now, so we felt that it had to be done."

The press release claims that there are currently 16 countries with annual inflation greater than 20%, but that the situation in Venezuela is particularly troubling, with the Venezuelan bolivar losing nearly 10% of its value every day.

Near the end of December, dash celebrated the 2,500th merchant in Venezuela to accept the coin as payment.

Reserve also reported that it has landed a partnership in Angola with 7Mobile Africa - reportedly the largest mobile importer in the country - to pre-load the app on all its shipped smartphones.

As Cointelegraph reported in June last year, in addition to Coinbase, the project has received backing from major venture capital names, such as Peter Thiel, Sam Altman, Digital Currency Group, Arrington XRP Capital, Distributed Global and GSR.IO, among others.

Huobi is currently the world's 9th largest crypto exchange by adjusted daily trade volumes, seeing over $2 billion in trades on the day to press time.

In February news broke that the Venezuelan government had introduced regulations for crypto remittances within the country.

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