CurrencyFair

CurrencyFair
Headquarters Dublin, Ireland
No. of locations Dublin, Ireland : Newcastle, Australia
Area served Australia, Canada, Europe, New Zealand.
Chairman Richard Rose
CEO Paul Byrne
Services Financial Services
Employees 50+ (Nov 2017)
Website currencyfair.com
Launched 2009 (2009)
Current status Growing

CurrencyFair is an online peer-to-peer currency exchange marketplace. CurrencyFair is headquartered in Ireland also with employees in UK, Australia and Poland. The company also has an office in Newcastle, NSW, Australia. CurrencyFair provides international transfers in 18 global currencies. [1]

CurrencyFair is a marketplace where money is never exchanged across borders rather it stays in the country of origin thereby avoiding bank conversion fees. Customers have one currency but need funds in another. They are "matched" with someone with a corresponding need - someone who has that currency but needs the other.[2]

With CurrencyFair customers can match with someone straight away using an Auto-Transaction or set a desired rate in a currency and wait to partially or fully match with someone in the Exchange Queue who is going in the opposite currency direction.[3]

In an interview with Irish Tech News, co-founder Brett Meyers says, "CurrencyFair is a peer to peer currency transfer service that empowers people to send money from their domestic bank account to their own, or a third party’s, foreign bank account up to 90% cheaper than they can using a bank or broker”.[4]

In an August 2018 interview with the Independent.ie, CEO Paul Byrne says "Asia is where we think most growth will come from over time and we want to be part of that story". [5]

History

CurrencyFair was established in April 2009 by co-founders Brett Meyers,[6][7] Jonathan Potter, Sean Barrett and David Christian.

The website went live in May 2010.[8]

In early 2014 CurrencyFair became the first platform in the world to break the $1 billion (€916 million) barrier in money-matching transfers and in April 2017 CurrencyFair revamped their platform to enable SMEs to use the service.[9]

CurrencyFair announced at the Web Summit in Lisbon in 2016 that it had raised €8million in funding.[10]

As of August 2017, the company announced it had traded over €5 billion.[11]

The CurrencyFair Mobile App was launched in September 2015.[12]

In July 2018, the company announced it had traded over €7 billion.[13]

In August 2018, the company announced a €20 million investment plan into the Asian market and the acquisition of Hong Kong based Convoy Payments.[14]

Awards

In November 2012, CurrencyFair was one of four companies to be named Best of Show at the inaugural FinovateAsia conference in Singapore.[15]

In 2013, CurrencyFair won the IIA Dot IE Net Visionary Awards for Most Insightful and Intriguing Internet Innovation.[16]

In October 2017, CurrencyFair was listed in the Top 20 Fintech Companies in Ireland by Irish Tech News.[17]

In November 2017, CurrencyFair was listed in a list of the "Fintech Startups in Europe to watch in 2018".[18]

In January 2018, CurrencyFair was listed in the Silicon Republic's list of the Top 100 Startups to watch in 2018 [19]

In May 2018, of the 28 international money transfer providers licensed to operate in Australia, CurrencyFair was one of the three providers that made the Mozo.com.au 2018 Mozo Experts Choice Awards winners list. [20]

Media

In December 2013, Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny officially launched CurrencyFair's new website[21] and announced the creation of 30 new jobs in 2014.

Sébastien Chabal featured in CurrencyFair's first TV campaign in January 2014, as the "CurrencyFairy".[22]

In January 2017, Brett Meyers appeared on BBC News to discuss peer-to-peer exchange and Brexit.[23]

In June 2018, CurrencyFair was mentioned in the Money Section of a Sunday Times Article on how Apps can help you track your spending and save money. [24]

In August 2018, CurrencyFair appeared in an article in The Times London announcing their acquisition of a Hong Kong payments firm [25]

In August 2018, CurrencyFair appeared in an article on Fora.ie about their acquisition of a Hong Kong payments firm [26]

In August 2018, CurrencyFair appeared in an article in Business and Finance [27]


On August 13th 2018, CEO Paul Byrne spoke on the Newstalk Business Breakfast show about their recent €20m funding and acquisition [28]

In September 2nd 2018, CurrencyFair appeared in an article in the Sunday Business Post [29]

Podcast

CurrencyFair sponsors the Jarlath Regan podcast "An Irishman Abroad" [30]

On Feb 21st 2018, CurrencyFair hosted a live Six Nations podcast special with Jarlath Regan in their offices featuring Bernard Jackman and Johne Murphy.[31]

Brand Ambassador

In January 2018, former Irish rugby player and Head Coach of Dragons Rugby Bernard Jackman was announced as the new CurrencyFair Brand Ambassador.[32]

Membership

CurrencyFair is also a coporate member of the Irish Australian Chamber of Commerce [33]

Regulation

CurrencyFair Limited, incorporated in Ireland (No. 469391) is fully regulated as an Authorised Payment Institution by the Central Bank of Ireland (No.C57373) under the European Communities (Payment Services) Regulations 2009. CurrencyFair Australia Pty Ltd (ABN 94 147 506 410) is regulated by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, AFSL No. 402709.[34][35]

Alternative providers

References

  1. Beugge, Charlotte (13 November 2015). "Currency transfer: how to make the most of your money". Telegraph. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  2. "Don't fancy the currency exchange rate? Now you can set your own". The Guardian. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  3. "Exchange v AutoTransaction – Which is best for me?". CurrencyFair. 2015-05-05. Retrieved 2017-12-22.
  4. "CurrencyFair, an Irish FinTech success story. Insights from Brett Meyers, CEO". Irish Tech News. Retrieved 2016-03-01.
  5. "CurrencyFair secures new backers for €20m growth plan". Independent.ie. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  6. "Entrepreneur Interviews: Brett Meyers, CEO, CurrencyFair". Forbes. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  7. "Currency Fair: the P2P Marketplace to Exchange Currency on your Terms [INTERVIEW]". VisibleBanking.com. 30 August 2012. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  8. Expat Money. "Currency exchange - the fair way". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  9. Charlie Taylor. "CurrencyFair 'scaling to profitability' as full-year losses mount". The Irish Times. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  10. Web Summit: CurrencyFair raises €8m in funding, Irish Times, 9 November 2016, retrieved 22 December 2017
  11. A CurrencyFair Milestone – 5 Billion Traded, CurrencyFair, 10 August 2017, retrieved 8 November 2017
  12. CurrencyFair unveils new peer to peer currency exchange app, Irish Times, 24 September 2015, retrieved 22 December 2017
  13. Another Milestone – 7 Billion Euro Traded, CurrencyFair, 25 July 2018, retrieved 25 July 2018
  14. CurrencyFair secures new backers for €20m growth plan, Independent.ie, 8 August 2018, retrieved 8 August 2018
  15. Bruene, Jim (2012-11-06). "FinovateAsia 2012 Best of Show Winners: CurrencyFair, Finantix, SocietyOne and Ubank". Finovate. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  16. "2013 Winners Announced - IIA Dot ie Net Visionary Awards 2013". Netvisionary.ie. Archived from the original on 2014-01-26. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  17. "Irish Tech News Fintech 20 Ireland Top 20 Companies Announced". irishtechnews.ie. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  18. Kennedy, John (2017-11-24). "20 of Europe's hottest fintech start-ups to watch in 2018". siliconrepublic.com. Retrieved 2017-12-19.
  19. "The Europe Start-up 100: Who are the ones to watch in 2018?". Facebook. Retrieved 2018-01-26.
  20. "Best International Money Transfers 2018". mozo.com.au. Retrieved 2018-05-08.
  21. Roisin Burke – 12 December 2013 (2013-12-12). "Kenny announces 30 new tech jobs at CurrencyFair". Independent.ie. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  22. "VIDEO: VERY STRANGE French rugby legend Chabal is a currency fairy... | Mail Online". Dailymail.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  23. "BBC News: Interview with Brett Meyers". Facebook. Retrieved 2017-01-05.
  24. "Ditch the abacus and control your cash the App-fab way". thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 2018-06-25.
  25. "Currencyfair buys Chinese operation". thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 2018-08-09.
  26. "CurrencyFair has bought a Hong Kong firm for its master plan to take on Asia". fora.ie. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  27. "CurrencyFair announces Asian expansion as part of €20 investment plan". Business and Finance. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  28. "NewsTalk Business Breakfast". NewsTalk. Retrieved 2018-08-13.
  29. "CurrencyFair announces Asian expansion". Sunday Business Post. Retrieved 2018-09-02.
  30. "An Irishman Abroad by Jarlath Regan on the App Store". Retrieved 2017-12-19.
  31. "An Irishman Abroad Live Stream hosted by Jarlath Regan". Retrieved 2018-02-22.
  32. "France have a staff that doesn't really inspire confidence and that's a bonus for Ireland". Retrieved 31 January 2018.
  33. "Irish Australian Chamber of Commerce website". Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  34. "Regulation - Protection, Security and Requirements". CurrencyFair. 2013-09-13. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  35. "CurrencyFair | CrunchBase Profile". Crunchbase.com. 2013-11-19. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
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