RIPPLE PARTNER GETS ACQUIRED FOR UNDISCLOSED SUM

WILL TERRAPAY BRING XRP TO MILLIONS OF NEW GLOBAL USERS?

TerraPay is a local, regional and global payments fintech startup that was incubated by Comviva, a mobile solutions provider based in India.
 TerraPay is a new payments infrastructure provider which links financial institutions, banks, mobile money operators, money transfer operators, into the same payments network to reduce costs.


TerraPay has secured more than 25 licenses to operate in over 60 countries, and currently exists in Africa, Europe, and Asia, with plans to expand globally with the $9.6 million they raised.

TerraPay will also be able to offer banking-like services to industries typically excluded from traditional payment processors and credit card systems.
 They’ll also make it possible for mobile money accounts to be used by businesses to pay employee salaries and allow for remittance payments to settle in real time.
TerraPay has actively pursued partnerships with global payments networks and remittance services like Visa, Xpress Money, MoneyTrans, Paga, Ria, Instant Cash, Ripple and MoneyGram.




RIPPLE AND TERRAPAY ARE PARTNERS, BUT NO MENTION OF XRP FOR TERRAPAY

Unlike many other Ripple partnerships, which leverage Ripplenet technology for cross-border payments, TerraPay has its own payments network and settlement system.

TerraPay also has partnerships with many of Ripple’s direct competitors in the global payments market, like Western Union.
TerraPay may utilize XRP or some other Ripple payments tech in the future, however as it stands presently no plans for such a joint-venture have yet been announced.

Follow me on
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/crypto-expert20

If you wont me to post your cryptocurrency article on my blog From the link

https://www.fiverr.com/cryptoexpert20/post-your-cryptocurrency-article-on-my-blog

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

SEC’s discussion with Bitcoin ETF issuers has moved into a key stage

What’s Causing the Current Bitcoin Crash and How Low Can it Go

BlackRock's Bitcoin ETF Now Invites Participation From Wall Street Banks