Bitcoin Began With Men. But Women May Be Cryptocurrency's Future
Bitcoin Began With Men. But Women May Be Cryptocurrency's Future · Fortune

Something new is happening in the world of cryptocurrencies.

The roughly $460 billion digital currency world, spawned eight years ago from the almost exclusively male domain of bitcoin, is starting to open to women. Four out of 30 of the largest initial coin offerings this year through October had female co-founders, and two of their ICOs were among the largest so far.

Women are now more visible as speakers at crypto conferences. And Coinbase Inc., one of the largest U.S. digital currency exchanges, said 46 percent of its new hires this year are women or are ethnically diverse.

Even if the viability of most blockchain projects remains to be seen, the experiences of pioneering women indicate that the nascent industry is moving toward a more inclusive culture and expanding its talent base as it marches down a path toward the mainstream — steps that in other fields have given a boost to innovation and financial performance.

“We have an opportunity to rebuild the financial system,” said Galia Benartzi, co-founder of Bancor, which raised $150 million in June. “Are we going to do it with all guys again?”

Famous Women

Famous women have popped up in the blockchain world — such as Blythe Masters, the former JPMorgan Chase & Co. banker, who quit her job to run Digital Asset Holdings. Another is Elizabeth Stark, who taught at Yale and Stanford universities before co-founding Lightning Labs, which is testing a technology to speed up cryptocurrency transactions.

Others are building their first careers in the industry, such as Maxine Ryan, a half-Chinese, half-Australian 25-year-old who dropped out of university to launch Bitspark in Hong Kong, where she was born. Its ICO last month raised $1.4 million.

“It’s still a handful, even though it’s growing,” said Ryan, about the presence of women in the blockchain world.

That’s a contrast from the early days. Nathaniel Popper’s 2015 book “Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money,” which covers bitcoin’s history through early 2014, mentions no women by name directly involved in the virtual currency. In a survey of bitcoin users conducted by CoinDesk Inc. in 2015, more than 90 percent of nearly 4,000 respondents were male.

There’s scant data on the diversity of crypto companies. Among 67 companies in the portfolio of Digital Currency Group Inc. — a company that invests in blockchain technology — 17 percent of employees were female, while a third had no women, according to a March 2016 blog post by DCG’s director of development Meltem Demirors. The figure is comparable to the percentage of venture-funded companies with female founders around the world, according to Crunchbase data.