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						Blockchain sports firm Chiliz to invest $50 million in 
						U.S expansion
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		 [March 02, 2021]  By 
		Simon Evans 
 MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) - Blockchain 
		sports venture Chiliz, which is heavily involved in European soccer, 
		will invest $50 million in an expansion to the United States, chief 
		executive Alexandre Dreyfus has told Reuters.
 
 The company based in Malta offers tokens to fans which allow them to 
		vote in a series of polls and receive special promotions and rewards, 
		creating what it calls a "new digital revenue stream" for sports 
		organisations through engagement with global fan bases.
 
 The fan tokens are listed on Binance, one of the world's biggest 
		cryptocurrency exchanges, and last week Serie A club AC Milan became the 
		latest team to launch their token, generating $6 million of revenue in 
		the first day.
 
 That move follows launches of tokens, on the company's fan engagement 
		platform Socios.com, for other high-profile clubs such as Juventus, 
		Paris St Germain and Barcelona.
 
 Cryptocurrencies and related tech have attracted a surge of interest in 
		recent months, as mainstream investors and companies embrace bitcoin, 
		the most popular digital token.
 
 Dreyfus said his company is now opening an office in the U.S as they 
		target the country's top sports franchises.
 
 "A huge focal point for us in our global growth plans is the U.S.. 
		That’s why we’re opening a New York office and investing $50 million 
		into the country’s sports industry in order to launch Fan Tokens with 
		leading franchises from the five major U.S. sports leagues," Dreyfus 
		said.
 
		
		 
		
 "We head to the U.S. with a proven track record in generating millions 
		of dollars of revenue for some of Europe’s biggest sporting 
		organisations. In 2020, we shared more than $30 million with our 
		partners, but this year we’re targeting a minimum of $60 million."
 
 Dreyfus said the FanMarketCap, a fan token price and market information 
		tracker run by Chiliz, currently stands at just under $200 million and 
		that he expects it to grow with the addition of new European soccer 
		clubs in the coming weeks.
 
 Chiliz are also in talks with Formula One and e-sports teams, he added.
 
		
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		PERFECT TIMING
 Joseph Edwards, head of research at cryptocurrency brokerage Enigma 
		Securities, said the timing is perfect for clubs, who need to boost 
		revenue after the hits from COVID-19 related restrictions, given the 
		current popularity of crypto markets.
 
 “Fan tokens right now are just hitting the perfect itch at the perfect 
		time - fans are disconnected physically from their fandom, and this 
		helps bridge that gap," he said.
 
		
		 
		  
		"It should be said that Socios have usually been very clever with these 
		launches - I can't think of any that were headline failures, even in the 
		overall crypto bear market - but there's a reason that they've been 
		stepping them up as of late.
 "It just hits right in the current moment that sports entertainment 
		finds itself in.”
 
 Edwards said fan tokens were growing in popularity at the same time as a 
		new type of digital asset - known as a non-fungible token (NFT) - has 
		exploded in popularity during the pandemic as enthusiasts and investors 
		scramble to spend enormous sums of money on items that only exist 
		online.
 
 Giorgio Ricci, Chief Revenue Officer at Italian champions Juventus, 
		stressed that there is more to the tokens than just revenue generation 
		however.
 
 “(It) is not just a short-term fix to the problems brought on by the 
		pandemic," he said.
 
 “It’s a solution to the longer-term issue of how to engage with the 99% 
		of fans that aren’t able to watch games from the stadium or ever set 
		foot in Turin.
 
 "In normal circumstances our stadium holds 41,000 people, but recent 
		estimates suggest our global fanbase is around 400 million, many of whom 
		are thousands of miles away," he added.
 
 (This story corrects typo in first paragraph)
 
 (Writing by Simon Evans; Additional reporting by Tom Wilson in London; 
		Editing by Ken Ferris)
 
  
				 
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