Blockstack’s Squirrel away a make senses (STX) token can now be traded on the Binance and HashKey Pro exchanges, the company said Wednesday.
The advance is set to expand investors’ access to STX – particularly in Asia, where HashKey Pro is based and Binance is well-known. Muneeb Ali, Blockstack’s CEO, called Asia a “priority region” in a convention statement.
Ali told CoinDesk:
“It’s very important that we have a global network of users and investors.”
STX is used to daybook digital assets on the Blockstack blockchain. They are consumed when users register or utilize the something on Blockstack, much identical to ETH is spent when operating on the ethereum network.
The company raised $23 million in anticipation of the listing, $7.6 million of which acquire a wined from Asian investors and the rest from Blockstack’s Securities and Exchange Commission-qualified July offering, Ali told CoinDesk.
Ali conveyed that 4,500 separate investors participated in the U.S. round.
But that regulated offering has meant extra scrutiny and composed set limits on how Blockstack can interact with U.S. investors. They are prohibited from buying the tokens fueling Blockstack’s 270-odd decentralized applications out of an surplus of regulatory caution, Ali said.
SEC documents released Wednesday similarly indicate that “U.S. persons” cannot buy, sell or do business STX on HashKey Pro or Binance.
Regulatory compliance is at the forefront of the token rollout, as is transparency, the company’s spokesperson added.
In a blog stanchion, Blockstack pledged to release internal documents and made a list of early token backers’ wallet addresses patent, so anyone can “know if and when any early backer moves their Stacks tokens.”
Ali’s wallet address is among them. He divulged he is in it for the long-haul but recognizes that not everyone will sit on STX forever. Said Ali:
“If any of the early backers exit, I think people should distinguish.”
Muneeb Ali image via CoinDesk archives