HomeNewsBusinessJignesh Shah’s 63 Moons wants to ride the crypto wave but won’t start an exchange

Jignesh Shah’s 63 Moons wants to ride the crypto wave but won’t start an exchange

TickerPlant was a wholly-owned subsidiary of 63 moons. Recently, 63 moons diluted its stake in TickerPlant to approximately 77.5 percent stake. Jignesh Shah had earlier launched Multi Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) in 2003.

December 14, 2021 / 20:36 IST
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FTIL founder Jignesh Shah.
FTIL founder Jignesh Shah.

63 Moons Technologies, formerly Financial Technologies India founded by Jignesh Shah, wants to ride the crypto boom in India but will not launch an exchange as one would have expected because of the businessman’s past association with one.

Instead, 63 Moons through its subsidiary Tickerplant said on December 9 that it launched a ‘Global Crypto Super App’ called CryptoWire. The company categorically said the group’s new venture is not aimed at floating a cryptocurrency exchange in India.

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“CryptoWire is neither a Crypto exchange nor a Cryptocurrency, and shall continue to rise above the race of exchanges and focus on providing people with fundamental knowledge on blockchain and crypto assets,” Tickerplant said in an email response to Moneycontrol.
Shah had earlier launched Multi Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) in 2003, India’s first commodity exchange.

The decision by 63 Moons to create content comes as a clutch of groups, backed by deep-pocketed investors, have jumped to float crypto exchanges amid the uncertainty over the fate of cryptocurrencies in India. Media reports have said the government will discourage trading in cryptocurrencies by imposing hefty capital gains and instead classify crypto as an asset class by launching a new bill in Parliament.