You've been redirected from MobilePaymentsToday.com to PaymentsDive.com. In March 2021, Mobile Payments Today became a part of Payments Dive. For the latest payments news, sign up for the daily newsletter.

Study: Venture capital blockchain investment through June approached $300M

A new study from Juniper Research has found that the total value of venture capital investment into blockchain technologies and Bitcoin companies totaled $290 million in the first six months of the year with more than 30 startups receiving funding in that time, according to a press release about the report.

Juniper found that Blockstream, Circle and Digital Asset Holdings accounted for more than a third of those investments.

The new research report, "The Future of Blockchain: Bitcoin, Remittance, ID Verification & Smart Contracts 2016-2021," highlighted the increasing diversification of nascent blockchain deployments, with applications ranging from identity to asset management. It pinpointed the banking sector as being particularly proactive with several banks having already adopted the Ripple blockchain protocol and others piloting competing solutions.

The research claimed that in areas such as transaction settlement, the introduction of a blockchain-based system would substantially reduce both the risk of error and the time taken for error checking. Furthermore, it argued that in cross-border remittance, the technology could allow new entrants to offer services at significantly lower costs to consumers.

However, the research cautioned that if smart contracts use blockchain technology, then their contents, including, potentially, bugs or flaws, are visible to all the users of that blockchain. It cited the recent case where a flaw on the decentralized autonomous organization network was exploited by a third party, resulting in the misappropriation of cryptocurrency worth nearly $80 million.

According to research author Dr. Windsor Holden, "While blockchain technology offers the potential for increased speed, transparency and security across an array of verticals, there has to be rigorous and robust roadtesting in each unique use case before any decision is taken."