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How Silvergate Became the Leading Bank for Crypto Startups

It’s been a covet journey for Alan Lane since the Silvergate Bank CEO bought his first bitcoin in 2013.

That was around the time his parsimonious, deposit-hungry bank, based in La Jolla, California, took on its first crypto exchange as a client. It was a gutsy move for a economic institution, since at the time most bankers viewed bitcoin as either a fad, a scam or a reputational and regulatory risk – if they had honest heard of it all.

Speaking Friday at the BlockFS conference in New York, Lane recalled:

“Here were these companies that were debauchee money from reputable [venture capital] firms. They weren’t doing anything illegal, they weren’t doing anything abandoned. And yet, they were struggling to maintain bank accounts. So I put our need for deposits together with their need for banking works.”

Five years later, Silvergate is arguably the leading bank for crypto startups in the U.S. Prominent exchange clients categorize Coinbase, Gemini, Kraken, and bitFlyer. And as revealed in the bank’s initial public offering prospectus, filed earlier this month, the bank now travails with 483 crypto startups that contributed roughly $1.7 billion in deposits to the balance sheet as of Q3 2018.

To lick the crypto-phobia that to this day has held back most of Silvergate’s peers from serving the sector, Silvergate invited interchange executives to meet directly with the bank’s regulators, Lane said during a panel discussion on banking bitcoin startups.

Impassive in the early days, he said, he was only interested in working with startups that had professionals with legal judgement from the traditional financial world and were wholly dedicated to the nitty-gritty of daily monitoring for ironclad compliance.

At the point, most crypto startups in those days had executives juggling diverse responsibilities, which was not going to cut it for a bank or its regulators. “The chief compliance copper is not a multiple-hat type of person,” Lane said.

The Coinbase Club

During the same panel, Nick Rosenberg, impresario of IT at the Metropolitan Bank in New York, said his institution –– one of the very few to compete with Silvergate in the space –– is aggressively pursuing a miscellaneous range of crypto startups.

But Lane said Silvergate has narrowed its focus over the years to almost exclusively take ones part exchanges, over-the-counter trading desks, and institutional investors.

In reference to both Silvergate and Metro sharing Coinbase as a reciprocated client, Lane said:

“Coinbase is probably the most well-banked company in the ecosystem. Coinbase probably banks with us and every other bank doing this on designedly.”

Lane said this may be the remnant of a popular strategy from the early days, when crypto companies commenced relationships with multiple banks in case one gets shut down.

To distinguish itself from a client’s other banks, Silvergate integrates with market platforms’ APIs so that institutional investors with Silvergate accounts can instantly make trades or deposits 24/7, yet if the bank is closed.

This also offers some peace of mind for those investors that they’ll be qualified to get their money out, in fiat form, in a hurry.

“That’s equally powerful on the way out, on the off-ramp,” Lane said. “Because we’ve all understood of exchanges being hacked.”

Blockchain data

The availability of data from a public ledger has helped Silvergate to get easy serving a sector long associated in the public mind, rightly or wrongly, with nefarious activities.

In the early lifetimes, Silvergate set up a process for ongoing monitoring that matched up deposits with bitcoin blockchain data. Up until today, Lane denoted his staff might make quarterly visits to exchange offices to make sure they have the most up-to-date television screen tools across blockchain-based assets, in addition to daily monitoring and routine communications.

“We wanted to be able to see both sides of that [bitcoin] dealing,” Lane said. “When you wire $50,000, send us the blockchain address…what we want to see on the blockchain is a transaction that agrees up with that $50,000 value.”

Silvergate often applies the same meticulous approach in requiring its clients’ use outside auditors for assets like dollar-pegged stablecoins – which Gemini and Coinbase have both launched in this year – to score sure fiat deposits match up with exchange records.

Although Lane said he originally scoffed at the event of cryptocurrencies designed to hold their value with fiat, his bank is now “looking into stablecoins” to learn more.

On to why Silvergate is slow and selective when onboarding new crypto clients, he concluded:

“It’s really important that it’s done Tory because if we have something illegal that goes across our platform, it could be detrimental to our business and to the integrity of the method. So we’re very protective of what we built.”

Alan Lane (right) speaking at Block FS image via CoinDesk

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