AlphaPoint unveils asset issuance and custody solution for ICOs

AlphaPoint, a financial technology company that offers infrastructure for digital asset trading networks providing institutions with the AlphaPoint Distributed Ledger Platform (ADLP), announced a new full-service Asset Issuance and Custody solution enabling clients to launch, manage, trade, and maintain Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs).

As an extension to ADLP, the new solution provides operators a secure, scalable, and streamlined solution for issuing digital assets and deploying them both to end users and the trading community at large.

Expanding ADLP Capabilities

ADLP will now offer customers the ability to host crowdfunding events (e.g. ICOs) and rapidly list newly-issued assets on exchanges running AlphaPoint’s infrastructure. The module includes a suite of tools for structuring, monitoring, and managing assets pre and post crowdsale.

Leveraging blockchain technology to digitize assets continues to gain momentum in 2017. New crowdfunding models are a particularly exciting trend, with over $165M in tokens sold via ICOs this year. Today we are happy to announce our support, enabling clients to launch, deploy, trade, and maintain ICO tokens.

Igor Telyatnikov, President and COO of AlphaPoint
Token Dashboard

New capabilities include the issuance of a token onto a public or private blockchain.

Pre-ICO services and support:

Post-sale services and support:

This is an exciting time for technology to drastically change the way companies gain access to capital. ICOs create a new source of funding to accelerate innovation, and we are proud to be building the technology platform to support those initiatives.

Joe Ventura, Founder and CEO of AlphaPoint

What is an ICO?

ICOs provide a way for the public to fund proposed products and projects by purchasing tokens native to those projects during crowdsale events, in exchange for national currencies or established cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin or Ether. ICOs are a way for blockchain startups to raise capital outside the traditional Venture Capital (VC) world. The majority of ICOs are not selling equity in a venture, but rather a token that will provide fuel to power a new application to be built using funds collected. While regulatory uncertainty remains regarding the treatment of specific ICO designs,

ICOs are becoming an increasingly popular funding vehicle.

ICO funding ballooned by a factor of 10 from Q1 2016 to Q1 2017, going from $6M to $69M. Over the same time, traditional VC investments in blockchain companies dropped over 30%, from $173M to $118M in Q1 2016 and 2017, respectively. Digital currencies, which are the primary mechanism to participate in ICOs, have seen their prices trend up sharply during the same timeframe, with Bitcoin passing $1,800, Ethereum briefly crossing the $100 mark, and Litecoin passing $30 for the first time.1  Recent notable ICOs include: Blockchain Capital raised $10M in 6 hours, Cosmos raised $16.8M in 28 minutes,  Gnosis raised  $12.5M in 12 minutes, and Aragon raised about 25M in 26 minutes.

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