Bybit donates $134M to BitDAO and integrates Arbitrum

Ethereum

The news about crypto derivatives exchange Bybit was two-fold Thursday, as the company announced via Twitter its $134 million contribution to the BitDAO Treasury in the form of Ether (ETH), Tether (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC), as well as the completion of the integration of Ethereum layer-2 solution Arbitrum.

BitDAO currently has one of the largest decentralized treasuries and it recently funded a $200M zkDAO to further build on zkSync and scale Ethereum. Bybit’s investment attests to its confidence in BitDAO to lead and support DeFi projects. Bybit joins other backers such as Peter Thiel, Founders Fund, Pantera, Dragonfly and Spartan.

Related: Arbitrum network suffers minor outage due to hardware failure

Bybit’s integration with Arbitrum will enable users to deposit and withdraw ETH, USDT and USDC on the Arbitrum network. Other benefits may include lower gas fees than those on Ethereum’s mainnet, rapid throughput and decreased latency due to Arbitrum’s optimistic rollups. 

Ben Zhou, Bybit co-founder and CEO, said that his firm is able to deliver “next-level products and services” thanks to Arbitrum’s “decentralized, developer-friendly, and broad ecosystem support.”

The Ethereum layer-2 scaling solution was developed to decongest the Ethereum mainnet. Arbitrum’s current total value locked, or TVL, is $1.54 billion, according to DeFi Llama.

Related: Crypto derivatives can foresee price action but need institutional buzz to truly shine

Bybit also recently launched it own NFT marketplace that will give customers the choice to use their Bybit accounts to trade NFTs instead of having to link their personal wallet addresses. 

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

BTC’s ‘incoming’ $110K call, BlackRock’s $1.1B inflow day, and more: Hodler’s Digest Nov. 3 – 9
BlackRock’s spot Ether ETF clocks $60.3M inflows, the highest in 94 days 
‘Defanging the SEC’ may turbocharge US economy: Cathie Wood
Founder of Bitcoin Fog crypto mixer sentenced to 12.5 years in jail
Crypto community reacts to reports of Wall St. lawyer up for SEC chair role

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *