With so much hype about cryptocurrencies, businesses are beginning to understand the benefits of accepting cryptocurrency payments — more secure transactions, an expansion of customer base, more affordable fees, avoiding chargebacks and faster funds availability.

Despite the explosive growth of e-commerce and increasing hype about cryptocurrencies, merchants still face four major hurdles when it comes to adoption:

· Integration of cryptocurrency payment

· Speed of cryptocurrency payment

· Price volatility of cryptocurrencies

· Cryptocurrency to fiat settlement

#1 Integration of cryptocurrency payment into their business

Majority of the businesses do not have the necessary technical expertise to integrate cryptocurrency payments into their business. Simply giving merchants an address that accepts cryptocurrency payments is not a solution to this problem. Payment processing involves a lot more than just receiving payments. It includes invoicing, accountability, receipt acknowledgment, Instant Payment Notification (IPN), and everything else associated with a payment processor. Merchants need a simplified blockchain payment solution that can be integrated seamlessly into their system, on top of existing traditional and digital payment options.

Here are 2 real-life examples that explain why it doesn’t work if merchants simply use the same address for accepting cryptocurrencies:

Online merchant accepting cryptocurrencies

In example 1.1.1, let’s say an online airline booking website runs a $100 promotion for a Sydney round trip. Within 10 minutes, they received more than 1000 bookings, 900 of the customers paid to the same cryptocurrency address: 12fqaTgrZ88ecSkxQ7ULKAbB1X. 100 of the customers did not complete the invoice payment process. How would the merchant confidently match a payment transaction to the correct booking invoice, given the fact that all 900 of them paid to the same address?

Offline chain of restaurants accepting cryptocurrencies

In example 1.1.2, let’s say a chain of restaurants start accepting cryptocurrencies. Would the business provide a wallet for each of its restaurant? How would restaurant outlet managers match cryptocurrency payment details confidently to an invoice in the Point of Sale? How would the business accountants know which transaction is paid for which meal, and at which restaurant outlet?

In examples 1.1.1 and 1.1.2, both the offline and online businesses will need to spend significant amount of manpower time and operation costs to ensure cryptocurrency transactions can be managed within their sales and accounting operations. This becomes a problem for merchants looking to adopt cryptocurrencies in their business.

#2 Speed of cryptocurrency payment affects a business operation

Let’s start with a scenario. Imagine Bob purchased a cup of coffee and paid using cryptocurrency. The blockchain network is currently congested, resulting in slower transaction confirmation. Now Bob is standing in front of the cashier, waiting for the payment to go through and there are 5 other customers waiting in queue to make their orders. The cashier can’t process the order because the payment has not been received on the merchant’s wallet. What would you do, if you are the cashier?

Transaction life cycle of cryptocurrency payment

Replicate this scenario and it becomes a serious problem when merchants adopt cryptocurrencies.

Figure 1.2.1 shows the transaction life cycle of a cryptocurrency payment. Payments are only confirmed once the transaction has been included in a block. The transaction speed in which how fast a payment gets confirmation, is determined by a fee market and the memory pool. Lastly, payment confirmations are prioritized according to the amount of fees paid.

This is a fundamental limitation of how fast a transaction can be processed based on blockchain confirmations. The amount of time for each confirmation differs with different cryptocurrencies. For example, the average block time for Bitcoin is 10 minutes, Dash is 2.5 minutes, GroestlCoin is 1 minute.

To speed up transaction, Bob would need to pay more in fees so that his transaction gets prioritized for the next block. But again, that is not a solution to this problem.

#3 Price volatility of cryptocurrencies

Volatility is a function of time. The longer the time a free market cryptocurrency remains in a merchant’s wallet, less predictable becomes its price with respect to fiat. The price volatility in the cryptocurrency market is one of the key factors that slows down merchant adoption.

For the past decade, the speculative nature of cryptocurrencies makes it hard for merchants to accept it as payment without taking on price risks. Consumers anticipating a rise in the prices of their cryptocurrencies will also not adopt it as their preferred payment method.

Theoretically, price volatility problem is a result of free market speculation. However technically, there are ways in which we can explore to address this problem.

Global market cap of cryptocurrencies from Sep 17 to Jan 19

Referring to Figure 1.3.1. According to CoinMarketCap global chart, the huge price volatility between Oct 2017 to Jun 2018 renders cryptocurrency as an unrealistic means of payment in B2B and B2C markets. However, global market capitalization is currently experiencing relative stability since Dec 2018 and recent price stability has raised expectations that cryptocurrencies would become widely used for payments in 2019.

Cryptocurrency would be perceived less as a medium of stored value and speculation. Instead, cryptocurrency would be adopted more as a form of payment in daily life transactions

#4 Cryptocurrency to fiat settlement

Most merchants will need to exchange cryptocurrency to fiat money so that they can pay their business expenses with fiat. The problem is the merchant never knows how much fiat money he will receive in the end. Transactions through a cryptocurrency payment gateway is indirectly a conversion of cryptocurrency to fiat currency based on the payment gateway’s conversion rate.

Due to the lack of economy of scale with a payment gateway, it leads to price inefficiency during conversion and merchants often incur losses on exchange rates unknowingly. Majority of the custodial payment gateways make extra profit by adding a spread percentage to the exchange rates.

How custodial payment gateways profit from exchange rates

Figure 1.4.1 shows 2 models on how custodial payment gateways profit from exchange rates. In Model 1, the percentage spread on exchange rate is passed on to the customer who is making the payment and merchant is paid in fiat currency. In Model 2, the percentage spread on exchange rate is applied during the withdrawal process which caused merchants to incur losses on exchange rates. Custodial payment solution providers have several models in which they can profit from the exchange rates.

Summary

The simple act of accepting cryptocurrencies could arguably be an abstract concept for businesses. To speed up merchant adoption, we would need a payment solution that offers speed, lower fees and seamless integration from systems to settlement.

AtomicPay is a new class of decentralized and non-custodial payment solution for tomorrow’s global digital payments. It eliminates the involvement of a third-party financial intermediary, giving merchants full ownership of their funds whenever a customer pays them.

By eliminating third-party financial intermediary, transaction process will become simpler and faster. Transaction fees will be reduced from many unnecessary fees to a single flat processing fee. Our peer-to-peer architecture will also reduce the financial regulators’ control over cryptocurrencies.

Sign up at AtomicPay and start accepting cryptocurrencies today.