Meta abandons its Diem digital currency project

(New York) The digital currency project launched with great fanfare in 2019 by Meta – the new name of Facebook – is officially buried: the Diem association which carried it plans to sell its main assets and dismantle for lack of knowing convince regulators.

Posted at 6:41 p.m.
Updated at 7:36 p.m.

Juliet Michel
France Media Agency

The social media giant had entered the arena of virtual currencies by creating “Libra” in 2019, which was to offer a new method of payment outside traditional banking circuits.

Aware of regulators’ concerns about a currency managed by a private company, the American group then decided to entrust its management to an independent entity, based in Geneva (Switzerland), and initially called Libra.

This initiative was on the right track, but “it had become obvious during our discussions with the American authorities that the project could not advance any further”, justified the director general of the association, Stuart Levey, in a press release Monday.

“The idea of ​​Facebook making a cryptocurrency had everyone panicked,” analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group told AFP. “For regulators, this was going too far. They had made it clear that they did not trust Facebook” on this project.

Diem will therefore sell its intellectual property rights and other assets to the company for $182 million to the bank Silvergate Capital Corporation, which specializes in digital currencies.

Originally, Facebook envisioned a new payment method that would make buying goods or sending money as easy and quick as an instant message.

But the project had, from its launch, raised an outcry from central banks, regulators and political decision-makers alike. They worried pell-mell about the risks to the stability of the financial system, the fight against money laundering or the protection of personal data.

An alternative currency

The fact that Facebook could potentially seek to coin money, in the same way as central banks, had also aroused the indignation of many regulators.

After the defection of several major partners such as PayPal, Visa and Mastercard, the organization had quickly revised its ambitions downwards, before renaming itself Diem at the end of 2020.

“From the outset, Project Diem sought to harness the benefits of blockchain technology to design a better and more inclusive payment system,” Levey said Monday.

The association has managed to build and test a technology-based payments system that also runs bitcoin, which includes safeguards against its use by criminals, he said.

At the same time, “we have actively sought feedback from governments and regulators around the world, and the project has evolved and improved significantly as a result,” the official noted.

“Diem is dead”

But talks eventually stalled and “the best way forward was to sell the Diem Group assets,” Levey concluded.

The association and its subsidiaries will begin to dismantle “in the coming weeks”, he said.

“As far as I know, Diem is dead,” summed up analyst Rob Enderle.

For him, Facebook’s reputation has reached a point “where they are going to have a very hard time doing something major”.

For Carolina Milanesi, analyst in creative strategies, Meta has “decided to cut its losses and focus on what matters most to it”, the metaverse.

Silvergate, the bank buying Diem’s ​​assets, said in a separate statement that it will pay $50 million in cash and return approximately 1.2 million new shares to Diem for a total amount equivalent to $182 million. .

With Diem’s ​​assets, in fact, the California-based bank wants in particular to improve the infrastructure it has already put in place for its own “stablecoin” project, a stable digital currency whose price is supposed to be at constant parity. with dollars.

Silvergate, which plans to launch it later this year, “is committed to continuing to foster the community of ‘open source’ developers who support the technology,” said chief executive Alan Lane. “We are sure they will be enthusiastic about our vision,” he added.


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