What's Fueling The Drop-Off In Initial Coin Offerings?

 | Mar 26, 2018 02:20

  • Number of initial coin offerings (ICOs) expected to fall in March 2018
  • U.S. regulation around ICOs is hazy and a number of projects are under investigation
  • ICOs failing because of rampant phishing and online scams
  • Added scrutiny, better data could drive the next wave of token offerings
  • Last week I attended one of the world's largest digital asset events, Token2049 in Hong Kong. Crypto enthusiasts from all over Asia as well as other parts of the world were there to discuss digital assets and blockchain-based tokens and technology. As well, there were a lot of people talking about Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), the cryptocurrency world's version of equity markets' Initial Public Offering (IPO). To say the number of people talking about launching initial coin offerings was overwhelming is an understatement.

    According to a report issued by VC firm FabricVentures and TokenData, based on their metrics, more than $5.6 billion was raised in 2017. "This compares to $1 billion of 'traditional' venture investing in blockchain startups in the same timeframe and a 'mere' $240 million dollars raised by tokens sales in 2016," the report goes on to say.