The Citizen (KZN)

The inside track of Luno’s big exit

DCG: DOMINATOR OF CRYPTO MARKET SNAPPED UP

- Ciaran Ryan Aim a ‘better financial system’

It’s future plans include deeper penetratio­n of UK and European markets.

Having built a customer base of five million in more than 40 countries since launching in Cape Town in 2013, Luno came to dominate the cryptocurr­ency market in SA and other countries such as Nigeria.

Last week the company announced that it had been 100% bought by US-based Digital Currency Group (DCG), which has investment­s in some 160 companies involved in cryptocurr­ency and blockchain developmen­t.

AlphaCode, the fintech investment arm of Rand Merchant Investment­s and an early investor in Luno, announced it had sold to DCG having achieved a 25% to 30% internal rate of return (IRR).

Luno was first into the SA market, introducin­g a million South Africans and five million people across the globe to Bitcoin. It has since introduced trading in digital assets such as Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash, Ripple and Ethereum.

SA has one of the highest Bitcoin penetratio­n rates in the emerging world, with nearly 11% of internet users having purchased crypto assets. This compares with 20% of the UK, and about 25% across Europe.

Luno was founded by Marcus Swanepoel (CEO), Timothy Stranex, Pieter Heyns and Carel van Wyk, who left the group in 2019. The existing directors will stay on, helping to implement the next phase of growth.

The company says it wants to upgrade one billion people worldwide to “a better financial system” by 2030.

Luno sees a vastly different future for money in the relatively near term, where cryptocurr­encies and digital assets – including “tokenised” stock exchange shares – become the norm.

Says Swanepoel: “As the industry evolved over the past few years, it became clearer to me that the most effective way to upgrade the world to a new, better financial system – at scale – is by having a company and business model that is deeply integrated across the entire industry and value chain, and importantl­y also one where these parts are able to maintain their own identity and brand while ‘loosely coordinati­ng’ between one another.

“There is only one crypto company in the world that has managed to lay the right foundation for this and that is DCG,” says Swanepoel.

“So when the opportunit­y came up to become a fully-fledged part of the DCG family, we took the opportunit­y without any hesitation.”

For Luno, as with most crypto exchanges, 2020 was a record year in terms of new customer sign-ups, spurred by the Covid-19 pandemic and fears over the future of money.

“It’s been an astonishin­g growth story over the last seven years,” says Luno GM for Africa Marius Reitz.

Luno is now headquarte­red in London, with regional offices in Cape Town and Singapore.

No price has been disclosed for the Luno acquisitio­n, though DCG first acquired a small stake in 2014, during an early round of fund raising. Other early investors were Naspers and Balderton Capital.

The Luno leadership team will remain entirely intact and Swanepoel will lead acquisitio­n efforts in his role as CEO.

Reitz says Luno’s future plans include deeper penetratio­n of the UK and European markets, and the US at a later stage. The company recently launched a crypto exchange in Australia, and has a presence in several European countries.

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? CRYPTIC. Luno introduced 1 million South Africans and 5 million globally to Bitcoin.
Picture: Bloomberg CRYPTIC. Luno introduced 1 million South Africans and 5 million globally to Bitcoin.

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