This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Tuesday, 18 July 2017
Bitcoin Could Help Solve The Cannabis Industry's Banking Problems
By Leigh Cuen
The cannabis industry is booming in more than two dozen states with medical marijuana laws and a handful that also legalized recreational use, including Colorado, Alaska, Washington and Oregon.
Nevada’s newly approved cannabis industry already has a weed shortage after just two weeks of operation. Demand quickly outpaced supply.
Peter Klamka, CEO of Bitcoin Direct LLC
in Nevada, told International Business Times cannabis entrepreneurs are
flocking to his door with questions about how to incorporate bitcoin
into their businesses, from edibles manufacturing to growers and
dispensaries. “I could spend all day talking to marijuana guys,” Klamka
said. “It [bitcoin] would solve a lot of their cash problems.”
Cryptocurrency could help heavily regulated weed markets bypass the old school banks still making business decisions based on social stigmas.
Although some reports estimate the legal cannabis industry is worth up to $10 billion, raking in $2 billion in California alone in 2016, banks and fintech platforms like Paypal routinely discriminate against cannabis and hemp businesses. The Associated Press
reported even low-level cannabis industry employees in Oregon have been
denied loans when trying to buy cars. So sellers are often forced to
operate mostly in cash, which creates issues with security, accounting
and storage, just to name a few.
“There’s a lot of cash out there.
Security firms are hired to protect the cash,” Wil Ralston, VP of sales
and marketing at SinglePoint, a technology provider that works with
dozens of dispensaries, told IBT.
Industry experts across several states
told IBT bank accounts were often frozen, shut down or new account
applications rejected outright if the financial institution caught any
whiff of relation to the lucrative weed market.
Ralston said many
banks who do work with cannabis businesses charge unusually high service
fees.
“They try to weed them out by cost,” he said. This is one of the
reasons why Congressman Ed Perlmutter reportedly estimated 40 percent of Colorado cannabis businesses don’t have bank accounts at all.
As
cryptocurrency gains popularity, the cannabis industry is increasingly
turning to bitcoin instead of banks. Ralston now knows of at least 30
dispensaries in Washington that now use bitcoin. The trend crosses state
lines. According to Christopher Dell’Olio, CEO of PyroTree Inc. in
California, 15 cannabis business clients are using his subsidiary’s
bitcoin payment processor on their websites.
“Payment solutions are
something that has taken so long to catch up with the industry,”
Dell’Olio told IBT.
Bitcoin ATM machines allow people to convert fiat currency like dollars into cryptocurrency, and vice versa, on the spot. Photo: David Ryder/Getty
Klamka
warned that it is too soon to say bitcoin will soon have widespread
adoption throughout the cannabis industry. There is still an education
gap, fears about market oscillation, and a fledgling cryptocurrency
infrastructure to consider. A 2016 study by the Pew Research Center
concluded 48 percent of Americans have heard of bitcoin, yet only 1
percent actually used it themselves.
“Their customers don’t use
bitcoin,” Klamka said. “It [bitcoin] squeezes the margins of the retail
guy.”
Basically, businesses can rent bitcoin ATM machines for
their stores to help crypto newbies convert cash or credit to bitcoins
on the spot. But, according to Klamka, the bitcoin operators often
charge up to 10 percent on transactions. Add that to the sky-high taxes
marijuana companies have to pay and the challenge of converting bitcoin
back to dollars for salaries and suppliers, and it is easy to see why
some sellers are skeptical.
“If the food chain adopted [bitcoin], you would see it spread really quickly,” Klamka. In June, First Bitcoin Capital Corp
launched an initial coin offering for a blockchain token called Weed,
to help smooth out the wrinkles in the industry’s business-to-business
transactions.
In the meantime, Klamka often advises companies to
buy their own bitcoin ATMs, for around $10,000, which help reduce
storage and security costs in the long run and get customers on board
with easy access to cryptocurrency. “It’s easier to manage your money
digitally than it is in paper form,” he said. Plus, reducing cash
stockpiles helps communities stay safe and the privacy features of
digital wallets could help employees avoid discrimination from lenders.
Several companies
are also exploring a variety of ways cryptocurrency can also provide
solutions across the supply chain. SinglePoint recently raised a $1 million
for bitcoin and blockchain services, including a seed-to-sale
blockchain system that tracks marijuana products throughout their
lifecycle to simplify regulatory compliance and help sellers monitor
quality. The plan is to roll that out before September. Next,
SinglePoint is also playing with the idea of creating its own B2B
cryptocurrency, called SingleCoin, through a collaboration with First Capital.
PyroTree CEO Christopher Dell’Olio (left) with two WebJoint employees including WebJoint COO Hilart Abrahamian (right).Photo: Alvaro Wong/Prime Scale Creative
Meanwhile, the PyroTree subsidiary WebJoint
is partnering with a blockchain car company called CyberCar for
delivery solutions. A blockchain tracking system could help with regulatory compliance
and improve efficiency. “The reason they’ve kind of been iffy on it
[delivery services], is it’s one of the harder things to track,”
Dell’Olio said. “Using the blockchain technology is a way to guarantee
that it is all immutable data.” This program is currently in testing and
will be completely rolled out by the end of the year.
All things
considered, blockchain technologies could help the legal cannabis
industry mature despite discrimination from banks and fiat payment
processors. Bitcoin isn’t only good for buying illicit drugs on the darknet.
It is also a catalyst for bringing a lucrative industry from the black
market to a taxable, highly regulated space. As cryptocurrency becomes
more widespread, the cannabis industry itself becomes more tech-savvy.
“I
really see this as helping to establish the infrastructure,” Dell’Olio
said. “I think there is so much potential to help the industry on the
payments end, and also tracking all the other activities, which is
really important.”
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