Israel's Blockchain Mining looks at Nasdaq, Toronto
listings
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[January 30, 2018]
By Steven Scheer
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Blockchain Mining Ltd
said on Tuesday it was preparing to list its stock on Nasdaq and the
Toronto Stock Exchange by July after Israel's market regulator said it
might ban companies involved in cryptocurrencies from the Tel Aviv
exchange.
Earlier this month, the Israel Securities Authority (ISA) proposed rules
to prohibit share listings by companies that mainly invest in, own or
mine cryptocurrencies. They would also not be allowed in the exchange’s
indexes, and if they were already listed on the exchange they would be
delisted.
The proposals followed a sharp rise in shares of Blockchain Mining,
which late in 2017 said it would shift its focus from mining for gold
and iron to mining cryptocurrencies.
Since then, its shares have soared nearly 5,000 percent.
Blockchain Mining's CEO and controlling shareholder Roy Sebag said it
would list shares and advanced depositary receipts (ADRs) on one or both
exchanges once an audit of its finances was complete, which he expected
by the end of June.
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"We like the idea of being on both," Sebag told Reuters after a news
conference. "We may end up deciding to be on one North American
exchange."
"Right now, we are in survival mode. We have been attacked by the
regulator. So we are saying, 'we are going to fight you on this rule but
we are going to list on two exchanges as well so if your rule goes
through we are still listed on them.'"
The proposed ban would not apply to companies with equity of more than
100 million shekels ($29 million) and with three years of audited
financial statements.
Sebag said his company had equity of $41 million, which is about 140
million shekels, but was still preparing for a possible delisting in Tel
Aviv.
Bitcoin is a publicly available ledger of a finite number of digital
"coins", which backers say can be used as a currency without the support
of any country's central bank. It is "mined" by computers, which are
awarded new coins for working out complex mathematical formulas. Several
other cryptocurrencies have also been launched that work on similar
principles.
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A view of the exterior of the Nasdaq market site in Times Square
after the Nasdaq breached the 6,000 mark for the first time ever on
Tuesday, in New York City, NY, U.S. April 25, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton
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In a reverse merger, Blockchain is set to buy control of Canada's Backbone
Hosting Solution, which is known as Bitfarms, in a deal expected to close at a
general meeting on Feb. 19.
Bitfarms currently has four blockchain farms where it mines for bitcoin and
other cryptocurrencies. Sebag said it consumes 27.5 megawatts of electricity but
the company will open three more facilities this year and will use 180
megawatts.
"The more capacity we have to mine the more we can mine," he said, noting that
in the last six weeks of 2017, it (Bitfarms) generated revenue of $10 million.
Sebag added that the ISA's proposed ban was discriminatory.
"Why is it that an entrepreneur starting in a garage looking to start a
cryptocurrency business punished with a higher qualitative listing requirement
than an entrepreneur looking to start a biotech or social media business?" he
said.
Shmuel Hauser, chairman of ISA, was quoted saying in December that: "We feel
that the prices of bitcoin behave like bubbles and we don't want investors to be
subject to that volatility and uncertainty." Hauser stepped down last week after
6-1/2 years as ISA chairman.
($1 = 3.3970 shekels)
(Reporting by Steven Scheer. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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