The cryptocurrency market was on the ropes on Crypto Black Friday, with Bitcoin and the clan tanking through the morning session before stabilizing. The crypto world was perhaps sitting on the edge of their seats pondering whether fundraising was about to go old school once more and whether there would be any future in the ICO markets.
The good news, for now, is that it’s all ok and, as has been the case on other infamous days where the markets have crashed, the recovery perhaps supports the more optimistic view that this may all be more than a bubble.
Looking back at the year, it was a spectacular one for cryptocurrency investors and for the ICO market that continues to grow alongside the number of cryptocurrencies that are now in excess of 1,300. The year certainly shouldn’t be marred by Crypto Black Friday.
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So turning to the ICO Market, there were some particularly successful fundraising campaigns. The most successful being:
Filecoin
Filecoin Group raised funds through both the ICO market and via the old school venture capitalists, with a total of $257m raised in the ICO market and in excess of $50m from the venture capital companies. Filecoin is a decentralized cloud storage network that records and stores data on a P2P platform. Filecoin’s ICO was the first SEC compliant ICO in the U.S, with only accredited investors allowed to invest. The successful ICO could well be attributed to the fact that the group had raised the more than $50m from leading blockchain venture capitalists prior to the ICO.
Tezos
The team behind the project raised in excess of $232m in the summer. The goal of the project is to deliver a self-amending decentralized ledger that is capable of creating smart contracts. The theory is that the Tezos blockchain will be able to adapt to any future technological advancements. Token holders will be involved in the approval and funding process for the new protocol. This may have been the 2nd most successful ICO of the year, but the team is currently facing legal action, with investors looking to have funds returned. Tezos tokens that were sold as securities were allegedly never registered. Perhaps one cryptocurrency to avoid until the dust settles…
EOS
Block.one, the team behind EOS, raised $185m in the summer. The EOS project is to develop its next-generation scalable smart contracts platform. EOS is software that introduces a blockchain architecture designed to enable vertical and horizontal scaling of decentralized applications. The technology has the potential to scale to millions of transactions per second, eliminate user fees and allow for quick and easy deployment of decentralized applications. The ICO was launched in June and runs for 341 days.