Site icon Nairametrics

Nigeria transacts $38 million worth of Bitcoin in June

Bitcoin on dollars

Nigeria’s volume of P2P transactions for Bitcoin topped $38 million in value for the month of June 2021.

This is according to data from Paxful and LocalBitcoins alone suggesting that the figure could actually be more.

Since the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) banned financial institutions from honouring cryptocurrency-related services in February 2021, one would assume that the volume of cryptocurrency-related transactions in the country would plummet but that has not been the case as Nigeria’s volume of P2P transactions in Bitcoin was equivalent to $38 million in the month of June 2021.

Bitcoin transaction volumes have been on the decline in recent months, especially after the cryptocurrency market crash that saw flagship cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, lose almost 50% of its value. Although the transaction volumes declined in most continents, Africa is the exception.

Nigeria’s P2P transaction volume valued at approximately $38 million in Bitcoin for the month of June is up 8.71% from last month’s volume which was $34.92 million. This suggests that despite banning financial institutions from facilitating cryptocurrency transactions in the country, Nigerians did not stop transacting in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

News continues after this ad

The transactions were mostly facilitated by online platforms that are outside the control of the CBN and the Nigerian Government which are being used to trade Bitcoin in Nigeria.

This information does not give a full picture of the level of transactions that occurred in the month as it only combines the transaction volumes of 2 exchanges; Paxful and LocalBitcoins. Other popular exchanges like Binance and Remitano were not included.

Nairametrics estimates the total volume of P2P transactions for the first half of the year is around $205.73 million.

Also in June, Kenya ranked second with $13.4 million in Bitcoin transactions in Africa. The surprise comes in the third position, a spot that Ghana snatched from South Africa with $11.2 million. South Africa comes in fourth with $7.7 million.

What to expect

Even with an outright ban on cryptocurrency-related transactions for financial institutions within the country, Nigeria has not stopped leading the African continent in cryptocurrency-related transactions as traders have now moved to P2P (Peer-to-Peer) trading, which is the first method of trading cryptocurrencies for cash.

Although the government intends to create its own CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency), the volume of cryptocurrency transactions is only going to get bigger as more people become aware of the potentials of cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin is trading at $32,500, up 1.91% for the day, as of the time of writing this report.

Exit mobile version