Reserved IP Address°C
04-02-2025
BSV
$31.65
Vol 25.52m
-1.48%
BTC
$84847
Vol 29551.98m
0.88%
BCH
$305.33
Vol 159.7m
-2.36%
LTC
$82.38
Vol 401.83m
-2.32%
DOGE
$0.17
Vol 1166.98m
0.39%
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Citing the continued bear market in cryptocurrencies, Switzerland-based exchange ShapeShift has let go of 37 employees, about one-third of its work force.

ShapeShift CEO Erik Voorhees made the announcement in a Medium post, saying the company had grown 3,000% in 2017, but afterwards had to deal with the industry-wide downturn.

In describing the “recent pain” as a result of exposure to cryptocurrencies, Voorhees said, “[W]e accept the volatility, we accept the risk,” adding, “Booms and busts are intrinsic to any frontier. And while comfort out here is elusive, passion and opportunity are abundant.”

He admitted that due to “a lack of focus,” in which the company had begun developing noncustodial portfolio management systems and acquired hardware wallet company KeepKey, the core business of providing a platform for trading cryptocurrencies had suffered.

“[D]espite these missteps, the profound and intense bull market of 2017 hid the lessons from our view. Everything was going well. Hundred percent growth every month has a way of obfuscating reality… Then 2018 arrived,” he said.

Among the troubles the company had to deal with was regulatory pressure, due to the lack of identity verification of users. However, by subsequently requiring users to provide personal data in compliance with know-your-customer (KYC) regulations, the exchange received backfire from customers who used its service precisely because of the relative anonymity it provided.

Voorhees said that with the past year’s challenges, a “new ShapeShift” app has been developed. “We don’t want to overstate with grandiose promises, we’ll simply invite people to try it out in the near future,” he said.

Last September, the Wall Street Journal published an article, which alleged, based on the authors’ time spent working with ShapeShift, that $9 million had been laundered through the exchange.

Voorhees hit back at the publication, showing that the amount asserted was arrived at from a lack of “understanding of blockchains and our platform in particular.” He also claimed that his company “has an industry-leading compliance and AML [anti-money laundering] program.”

Recommended for you

Innovation continues as Philippine Blockchain Week returns
The Philippine Blockchain Week returns on June 2025, shedding light on the practical applications of blockchain and the opportunities it...
April 2, 2025
Indian family offices drawn to startups in fintech, AI: PwC
India's fintech sector is rapidly growing, with startups making significant contributions with support and investments from ultra-wealthy family offices.
April 2, 2025
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement