This year’s cryptocurrency crash has saddled investors with billions of dollars in losses, but the world’s largest virtual currency exchange is still making money hand over fist.
Binance expects a net profit of $500 million to $1 billion in 2018, according to its chief executive officer. First-half revenue was around $300m, Changpeng Zhao said in an interview. Average daily turnover at his venue, which opened a year ago, is roughly $1.5bn, and Binance now has 10 million users, he said.
Zhao’s figures illustrate how some cryptocurrency exchanges are thriving despite a rout in digital assets that’s seen Bitcoin lose 52 per cent of its value this year as buyers pull back, venues are repeatedly hacked and regulators increase their scrutiny.
_______________
Read more:
Bitcoin rallies after falling through $6,000 mark
Cryptocurrency surge creating 'new breed of gamblers'
Bitcoin plunges 5 per cent amid hacking fears at South Korean exchange
_______________
Binance, which has had run-ins with authorities in Japan and Hong Kong, plans soon to allow customers at venues in Uganda, Bermuda and Malta to convert their virtual tokens to fiat currencies including the euro, as it looks to build on its rapid growth.
Zhao has previously said that Binance had 2 million users at the start of the year. He started the venue in July 2017, opening 11 days after raising $15m in an initial coin offering.
As the crypto frenzy peaked late last year, the exchange was hosting as much as $11bn of trades a day. Binance topped Coinmarketcap.com’s ranking of exchanges in the past 24 hours, with $1.3bn worth of trading.