Interestingly, a Panama-based crypto trading platform has recently made significant moves in El Salvador. The Ikigii platform mainly does one thing: it combines the traditional banking system with the Bitcoin ecosystem.
The core logic is simple: users can receive BTC, convert it into local fiat currency, and then perform cross-border instant transfers. This approach is especially popular in Central American countries with relatively friendly regulations—El Salvador, as the first country in the world to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, naturally becomes a natural testing ground for such innovative services.
The platform has submitted an application for a digital asset service provider license to the National Digital Assets Commission (CNAD) of El Salvador. What does approval mean? It could lead to the first integration of traditional banking infrastructure with crypto payment systems in the region. For high-frequency scenarios like cross-border remittances and trade settlements, BTC is indeed much faster than SWIFT by an order of magnitude.
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CryptoPhoenix
· 21h ago
El Salvador has really become the biggest testing ground. If this wave gets approved by CNAD, the entire Central American payment system will change. Instant BTC transactions make traditional banks nervous; the SWIFT system is indeed a bit outdated.
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GasFeeTherapist
· 21h ago
Salvador is playing an interesting game; Panama's small platform surprisingly manages to stir up waves here.
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RugpullTherapist
· 21h ago
Salvador's game is becoming more and more interesting now, SWIFT should be nervous haha
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老王招财的猫
· 21h ago
Just go for it💪
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ZKProofster
· 21h ago
ngl, mixing traditional banking rails with bitcoin is like... technically speaking, asking for compliance headaches down the line. but sure, el salvador's the perfect petri dish for this tbh.
Interestingly, a Panama-based crypto trading platform has recently made significant moves in El Salvador. The Ikigii platform mainly does one thing: it combines the traditional banking system with the Bitcoin ecosystem.
The core logic is simple: users can receive BTC, convert it into local fiat currency, and then perform cross-border instant transfers. This approach is especially popular in Central American countries with relatively friendly regulations—El Salvador, as the first country in the world to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, naturally becomes a natural testing ground for such innovative services.
The platform has submitted an application for a digital asset service provider license to the National Digital Assets Commission (CNAD) of El Salvador. What does approval mean? It could lead to the first integration of traditional banking infrastructure with crypto payment systems in the region. For high-frequency scenarios like cross-border remittances and trade settlements, BTC is indeed much faster than SWIFT by an order of magnitude.