Publicly Listed Meitu Tapped Coinbase for $90M BTC, ETH Buy
2 min readCoinbase Institutional, the wing of the cryptocurrency exchange that handles transactions for companies, today announced that it has custody of the $90 million BTC and ETH snapped up by Chinese tech company Meitu this month.
Meitu, which makes smartphones and selfie apps, spent $22 million on ETH and $17.9 million on BTC at the start of March before buying an additional $28.4 million ETH and $21.6 million BTC two weeks later.
Coinbase Institutional was selected by @meituofficial for both trade execution and custody on their treasury allocation into ETH and BTC. To learn more about how Coinbase Institutional is helping corporates diversify with crypto click here:https://t.co/esmVq9kaFT
— Coinbase Institutional (@CoinbaseInsto) March 24, 2021
The Fujian-based company said it made the buy because it believes the cryptocurrencies “have ample room for appreciation in value” and that the coins would serve as an alternative to cash.
Coinbase Institutional said in an announcement that it was chosen by Meitu as the sole partner to take care of the buy and then store the assets. Coinbase has been chosen by other big companies—including business intelligence firm MicroStrategy—to take care of BTC storage.
“Meitu joins a long list of companies that Coinbase Institutional continues to help diversify with crypto including Microstrategy and other corporations,” the company said. “However, Meitu has made a unique case, not seen widely yet, on allocating a significant portion to ETH.”
Meitu is the latest institution to allocate large funds to crypto. MicroStrategy was the first and now holds more than $5 billion in BTC. It has since been followed by payments company Square, which has plugged $220 million in the currency in the past year.
And Elon Musk’s car company, Tesla, completed a $1.5 billion BTC buy in February.
But despite joining big institutions in investing in alternative assets, Meitu acknowledged the risks involved, saying at the time that “cryptocurrency prices in general are still highly volatile.”
Meitu, founded in 2008, is best known for its selfie app software which helps make “everyone become beautiful easily,” according to the company website.
It launched Hong Kong’s biggest initial public offering in years in 2016 when it listed on the stock exchange.