Thu Mar 08, 2018 9:58 am

For more Crypto news latest update ico events currency upgrade Crypto Trading Signals & Crypto Auot Trading Bot then here is the best telegram channel which provide lot of benefit & help you to make profit in Crypto currency marketFree Automated Trading BOT trades automatically in Account & Crypto Trading SignalsJoin- https://t.me/cryptosignalalert Binance Bittrex Poloniex High profitable Free Crypto Signals with consistent profitJoin- https://t.me/btctradingclub High profitable Automated Crypto Trading BOT trades automatically in Account with consistent profit.Visit www.crypto-autobot.com Bitcoin is revolutionizing markets in Africa. Ray Youssef, head of cryptocurrency exchange platform Paxful, has found himself at the heart of one of cryptocurrency’s most promising use cases: using technology to help people in developing countries.“We’re growing pretty fast, especially into Africa,” Youssef, whose company has traded over 40,000 bitcoins since its founding two-and-a-half years ago, tells Inverse. “It’s absolutely massive. Absolutely massive. In the beginning we had no idea what was going on, why do these folks want Bitcoin so badly?”It’s not just Youssef that’s spotted the opportunities. Adewale Bankole, president of the Bastiat Society and Humaniq ambassador of Nigeria, told CCN in June 2017 that Africa is “most fertile land for cryptocurrencies.” In fact, demand for crypto in Africa has been so high that the Zimbabwe-based Golix exchange saw the price of one bitcoin peak at $34,000 in December 2017, 40 percent higher than its price elsewhere. At some times in Nigeria and Angola, the price has jumped to 100 percent more than global value as eager customers snap up crypto.Paxful has also noticed the same boom. Nigeria is fighting with the United States for number one in terms of transactions on the exchange, with Ghana third. The service allows users to trade a wide number of goods for cryptocurrency: $10 million per week goes from Nigeria to China in iTunes gift cards alone.Here’s why Africa is the perfect continent for a cryptocurrency boom.People need a stable currencyDeveloping economies with currency instability are an ideal use case for bitcoin. Youssef points to Nigeria, where 1,000 naira has moved from being worth $8 in 2005 to just $3 over the past 12 months. Other countries have experienced worse instability: Zimbabwe’s dollar famously hit a hyperinflation rate of 500 billion percent before the country abandoned the currency in 2009.“That’s the first use case, they just wanna preserve the value of their wealth,” Youssef says.People want to send moneyUntil last summer, banks in Nigeria placed restrictions of $100 online spending via credit card per month. This came after an oil price crash in 2014 that led to government restrictions on international spending.“Even if you had a million bucks in your account, you could only spend around 100 bucks,” Youssef says.Youssef gave the example of a Nigerian man that wanted to buy an iPhone X. He bought bitcoin, put it into his Paxful wallet, then sold the bitcoin to a guy on Paxful who put $1,200 into his Alipay. He then bought the iPhone off AliExpress