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Topic: Wells Fargo examines offering bitcoin services (Read 803 times)

sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
January 15, 2014, 11:17:15 AM
#3
They want to somehow put the blame on their money laundering scams to bitcoin

Lol. Well, bitcoin would certainly make it easier for large banks (such as HSBC) to continue laundering money to terrorists and mexican drug cartels without getting caught. If that's the case, this is REALLY bullish for bitcoin (just look at the amounts of money they've been caught laundering... altogether hundreds of billions of dollars; if bitcoin was used as a large-bank-money-laundering-reserve, this would, hilariously, cause price to skyrocket.)
legendary
Activity: 1330
Merit: 1000
dafar consulting
They want to somehow put the blame on their money laundering scams to bitcoin
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
News like this is why price still hasn't tanked  Cool

Wells Fargo is desperate.

www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-01-14/wells-fargo-americas-largest-bank-market-cap-pushing-offer-bitcoin-services

Think it's a stretch to see this having an effect on price? It's a sign of legitimacy, a hint that large establishment banks have not only taken interest... but, they've TAKEN INTEREST.

Quote
Earlier we pointed out that mortgage origination at Wells Fargo - the bank's bread and butter - is crashing at an unprecedented pace, and as per the conference call, Q1 isn't looking any better. Naturally, it stood to reason that the bank would seek alternative business and product lines to supplant the declining revenue it used to generate when it would originate some $100 billion in mortgages every quarter, now half that number. However, not even in our wildest dreams did we predict just what this "alternative" product would be. Because, as the FT reports, Wells Fargo, the largest US bank by market cap, is currently exploring Bitcoin as just that revenue replacement source. Per the FT: "Wells’ anti-money laundering chief, Jim Richards, has launched a group to examine how it might safely offer Bitcoin-related services or banking arrangements to virtual currency entrepreneurs, according to people familiar with the initiative."

More:

    Wells chief executive John Stumpf said it was the bank’s practice to examine financial innovations.

     
   “We have made enormous investments as a company and as an industry in a payments system that is secure, and we need to be sure we are up to speed with what other things are going on and their risks and rewards,” he said.

     

    “We want to make sure we understand what it is, what it does and what it does not . . . . The world is changing and will continue to change. Whether Bitcoin will be a big part of that, who knows?”

As the FT accurately points out, "the difficulty in persuading financial institutions to offer bank accounts has become one of the biggest difficulties facing Bitcoin entrepreneurs in the US." Which of course means it is also a great opportunity for the first entrant, such as what almost certainly appears to be Wells:

    Wells’ public-private group, comprising more than a dozen members, was scheduled to meet in San Francisco on Tuesday to debate the security issues surrounding banking and Bitcoin. One possible aim would be to produce a set of anti-money laundering principles for established financial institutions to follow when dealing with virtual currency start-ups, according to a person familiar with the event.



Lol.
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