BitFlyer founder seeks to reinstate self as CEO, main agency to IPO: Report

by Jeremy

Yuzo Kano, the co-founder of Japan-based cryptocurrency change bitFlyer, is looking for to reinstate himself as CEO in a shareholders assembly subsequent month, in an obvious bid to reinvigorate what he claims is a stagnating agency. 

Kano resigned in 2019 following a collection of administration disputes however is now decided to reinvigorate the crypto agency and lead it towards an Preliminary Public Providing (IPO) within the coming months, in line with a Feb. 26 report by Bloomberg.

The previous CEO additionally stated he additionally needs to place Japan again on the map on the planet of cryptocurrency.

“I’ll make it able to combating on the worldwide stage,” the bitFlyer co-founder stated in a current interview.

Kano shared the Bloomberg put up on Feb. 27 to his 111,500 Twitter followers. Supply: Twitter.

Based on the interview, if reinstated, he intends on introducing stablecoins to the buying and selling platform, construct a token-issuance operation, and open-source bitFlyer’s “miyabi” blockchain to the general public, together with pursuing an IPO within the coming months.

Kano — who retained a 40% stake within the firm regardless of stepping down — defined that in his time away as CEO, bitFlyer stopped innovating and launching new services, which he intends on altering.

It’s “an organization that produces nothing new,” he claimed.

With over 2.5 million accounts, bitFlyer is likely one of the bigger cryptocurrency exchanges in Japan. A few of its rivals, comparable to Kraken, not too long ago introduced the closure of its Japan enterprise on Dec. 28, 2022, whereas Coinbase halted its operations within the nation on Jan. 18, 2023. 

Associated: Japanese Alternate bitFlyer Blockchain Arm Launches Consulting Service

A lot of the administration points skilled on the agency got here partly as a result of regulatory pressures imposed by Japan’s Monetary Companies Company in 2018 as a method to undertake extra stringent cash laundering insurance policies.

He added that a number of CEOs have come and gone since then as a result of they Kano, being bitFlyer’s largest shareholder, identified the place they had been falling quick:

“It’s my accountability to level out points and demand enchancment […] I reprimand individuals once they trigger issues, make false stories or fail to do no matter they’re alleged to do.”

Nonetheless, the previous CEO believes the “very strict laws” set in place can function a “mannequin for the remainder of the world.”