Surprise! OKEx Filipino Community Meetup Dec. 2019
Food and Trading – I recorded everything that happened during the OKEx meetup last December 21, 2019.
Food and Trading – I recorded everything that happened during the OKEx meetup last December 21, 2019.
Randy Knutson: Blockchain will also be an important factor in being the backbone of information and communications capabilities of e-government offices based on statistics, lawmakers and disaster preparedness as they will use advanced analytics to make informed decisions based on the smart city framework for information and governance indexes.
Peter Ing: As a sector overarching player, we have felt the challenges in the Philippines first-hand. We constantly strive to look for ways to support the industry and look for viable business models ourselves.
Myrtle Ramos: Overall, the next year is shaping up to be crucial for the blockchain technology and digital assets ecosystems.
Isabel Laurel: I hope the Philippines snaps out of the waiting game and recognizes opportunity loss for bringing business to our exigent economy. I think that the big no longer beats the small- it’s the fast beats the slow these days.
Colin Goltra: I personally want to see expanded protocol-level development happening IN the Philippines – that is moving from wallets and exchanges to projects like DeFi, NFT, structured products, etc.
Miguel Cuneta: I have a multi-year or even multi-decade view of the industry, and I am looking forward to the same thing since I started in 2014, and that’s Bitcoin becoming a global standard for open, transparent, borderless, and censorship-resistant value transfers on a massive scale. We are barely scratching the surface of what is possible.
Luis Buenaventura: Our goal is to become the primary liquidity provider in the country in 2020, as we leverage both our license, our engineering capabilities, and our trading experience to invisibly power as many sales channels as possible: OTC, P2P, online retail, cash-to-crypto outlets, you name it.
The crypto holder in the Philippines has an average age of 45-54 years old, employed, and has PhD or Master’s Degree.
Certified Public Accountants can rely and be guided by such interpretations when performing accounting and audit services for cryptoasset businesses.