FTX Japan

FTX Japan

Cryptocurrency platform providing liquidity to the crypto economy.

  • Edit
Get premium to view all results
DateInvestorsAmountRound
-investor investor

€0.0

round
N/A

€0.0

round
investor

€0.0

round
N/A

€0.0

round
investor investor

€0.0

Valuation: €0.0

round
investor investor investor investor investor investor investor

€0.0

round
investor

€0.0

round
investor

€0.0

round
*

N/A

Acquisition
Total Funding000k
JAFCO Asia
JAFCO Asia(exited)
IDG Capital
IDG Capital(exited)
Bitmain
Bitmain(exited)
FTX
FTX(exited)
DG Ventures
DG Ventures(exited)
Koi Capital
Koi Capital(exited)
21M Capital
21M Capital(exited)
Invesco
Invesco(exited)
JAFCO
JAFCO(exited)
Notes (0)
More about FTX Japan
Made with AI
Edit

FTX Japan represents a complex chapter in the cryptocurrency exchange sector, marked by a series of acquisitions and dramatic market events. The entity's origins trace back to Quoine, a fintech company founded in 2014 by Mike Kayamori and Mario Gomez-Lozada. Kayamori brought extensive experience from SoftBank Group and as a venture capitalist, holding degrees from the University of Tokyo and Harvard Business School. Gomez-Lozada had a deep background in financial technology, having served as Chief Technology Officer at Merrill Lynch Japan and Chief Information Officer for Japan at Credit Suisse. Their joint vision was to bridge traditional finance with the burgeoning crypto economy.

Quoine initially launched Quoinex, a fiat-to-crypto trading platform, and later Qryptos, a crypto-to-crypto exchange. In 2017, it became one of the first crypto exchanges to be officially licensed by Japan's Financial Services Agency (FSA). The two platforms were eventually merged into a unified portal named Liquid in September 2018. Liquid operated on a matchmaking business model, earning revenue from transaction fees on trades. It offered a user-friendly interface for trading a variety of cryptocurrencies against fiat currencies like JPY, USD, and EUR, and also provided advanced features like margin trading with up to 25x leverage.

In a pivotal move, FTX Trading Ltd. acquired Liquid Group in February 2022 to gain a strategic foothold in the highly regulated Japanese market. Following the acquisition, Quoine Corporation was renamed FTX Japan K.K., and it began integrating FTX's products, offering spot trading and perpetuals to Japanese customers. However, this expansion was short-lived. In November 2022, the parent company FTX collapsed and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, leading to the suspension of trading and withdrawals on FTX Japan. Due to Japan's strict regulatory requirements that mandated the segregation of customer assets, FTX Japan's funds were protected from the parent company's broader financial issues. This allowed FTX Japan to resume withdrawals in February 2023, a stark contrast to the situation for millions of other FTX customers globally. In the aftermath, the bankrupt FTX entity sought to sell its solvent subsidiaries, including FTX Japan. Ultimately, Japanese exchange bitFlyer announced its acquisition of FTX Japan in mid-2024, with plans to rebrand the entity and focus on providing crypto custody services for institutional clients, potentially including services for future crypto ETFs.

Keywords: FTX Japan, Liquid.com, Quoine, cryptocurrency exchange, Japanese crypto market, Mike Kayamori, Mario Gomez-Lozada, FSA license, bitFlyer acquisition, crypto custody, perpetuals trading, spot trading, crypto-fiat exchange, blockchain finance, financial regulation, Chapter 11 bankruptcy, asset segregation, institutional crypto services, crypto derivatives, World Book, QASH token

Analytics
Unlock the full power of analytics with a premium account
Track company size and historic growth
Track team composition and strength
Track website visits and app downloads

Tech stack

Group
Tech stackLearn more about the technologies and tools that this company uses.
Book a Demo