Exchange and wallet service BitX is about to go global with a grand plan to serve the world’s emerging economies with one recognizable brand, based on solid financial industry foundations.

BitX will do all this while retaining a local staffing and customer service identity in each of the 12-plus countries it serves, according to Marcus Swanepoel, the co-founder and CEO of parent company Switchless.

Switchless acquired the South African bitcoin exchange in October 2013 with the intent of transforming the exchange into something much larger and more international.

Big sell

BitX’s primary mission is to apply professional standards from the global technological and financial worlds to localized services, in order to build digital currency trust in new markets, said Swanepoel, adding:

“We’re bringing robust technology [and] high security, including cold storage, proper APIs and ease of use, to all corners of the earth.”

The right formula of experience and a professional approach is paramount for any company introducing, not just a new product, but a new kind of financial system to places where awareness might be low, or technology seen as less than secure.

“We’re a trusted party that’s been in this business for a long time,” said Swanepoel. “We have a solid track record of being reliable, transparent and innovative, and above all providing our customers with a great user experience. The time has come to share this with the rest of the world.”

To succeed, BitX needs to sell, not only the concept of bitcoin and digital currency to local consumers, but also the existing financial and commercial networks with which it needs to maintain healthy relationships.

Swanepoel added:

“We have very strong technical people but also people from a financial background; we have a well-developed compliance framework, including proper KYC and AML procedures, and we’re able to leverage our good relationships with regulators, merchants and banks that operate in different emerging market countries.”

Security paramount

BitX’s clean design sits atop an infrastructure designed for high-volume stability and secure, multi-signature ‘deep freeze’ storage.

The exchange and wallet functions are kept separate. By verifying their email address, users can utilize the basic wallet to send and receive bitcoin, while those who comply with additional verification steps have access to a full exchange account where they can also buy and sell bitcoin, and shift funds to and from the wallet easily.

Under BitX’s security policy, no individual at the company has access to customer funds and there are regular proof-of-reserve audits.

Two-factor authentication is recommended for account holders and BitX’s ‘hot wallet’ is supplied with the company’s own reserves.

Developers can access the public and private APIs to interface with all relevant exchange features.

Worldwide rollout

BitX is initially establishing operations in 12 countries: Brazil, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Malaysia, Mexico, Namibia, Nigeria, Philippines, Poland, South Africa and Turkey.

South African and Namibian residents already have access to full exchange features, while the secure wallet is available to anyone around the world.

Exchanges will come online in the other 10 markets over the coming months – as soon as BitX has cleared the regulatory hurdles and hired local teams. On the latter point, BitX is currently engaging in a massive worldwide recruitment drive.

The company is also developing ‘merchant modules’ for local businesses to accept and process bitcoin payments.

Most of the countries mentioned above have been under-served by digital currency exchanges so far, at least the class of exchange BitX aims to be. The firm also wants customer service to be in the local language wherever possible.

Explained Swanepoel:

“There’s global liquidity versus local liquidity, and we believe, in the long run, local is going to play the most important role in this ecosystem. People need to try bitcoin services in their local currency and language, they want to deal with customer service in their region.”

Develop globally, release locally

BitX has a “strong R&D pipeline” that includes various new features, products and partnerships, said Swanepoel.

This should be one of the worldwide distribution platform’s strengths, since there is no need to develop new features from scratch for each location, he said, adding:

“There are economies of scale here. When we find something that works in one market, we can easily roll it out to others around the world. Technology and financial systems broadly operate the same way across markets.”

Building volume

Swanepoel added that current bitcoin trade volumes in emerging markets pale in comparison to those in the more developed Europe and US. But even some of those countries don’t yet have access to fully functional online exchanges and are trading via LocalBitcoins and WhatsApp groups.

“The reality is, you’re not going to have Bitstamp-like volumes in three months. But you’re building a really solid infrastructure and a brand that people trust, and a great user experience, and these volumes really are picking up.”

The team has already seen market volumes in South Africa, a ‘hybrid developed-emerging market’, doubling every month, and other exchange volumes in places like Brazil and Poland are respectable, relatively speaking.

“I think one of the main issues in these markets is, other than people not knowing a lot about bitcoin, is people saying ‘What do I use it for?’,” said Swanepoel. To this end, BitX’s merchant tools will play a part in creating utility.

Swanepoel has become known in the bitcoin industry for his efforts to build bridges between digital currencies and the ‘traditional’ finance industry. He has been using his years of experience at companies like Standard Chartered and Morgan Stanley, and experience in the private equity field, to build his companies.

Global expansion image via Shutterstock