Compartir este artículo

Voyager Digital Reports 75% Revenue Rise in Q4, Cites Increased Crypto Adoption

The Canadian crypto broker said its revenue growth was due to the growing adoption of cryptocurrency.

Actualizado 9 may 2023, 3:14 a. .m.. Publicado 5 ene 2021, 2:19 p. .m.. Traducido por IA
Voyager founder and CEO Steve Ehrlich (right)
Voyager founder and CEO Steve Ehrlich (right)

Cryptocurrency broker Voyager Digital (CNSX: VYGR) says its revenue for Q4 2020 is expected to reach around $3.5 million, an increase of 75% from the previous quarter.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
No te pierdas otra historia.Suscríbete al boletín de Crypto Daybook Americas hoy. Ver todos los boletines

  • In an announcement Tuesday, the Canada-listed firm said the increase is also up 3,877% from the fourth quarter of 2019.
  • Voyager further reported a December revenue run rate of over $20 million, compared to $200,000 in December 2019. A run rate is estimated revenue extrapolated from available figures.
  • Assets have continued to grow, Voyager said, increasing over three times from the September quarter to over $265 million in early January.
  • “As widespread adoption of cryptocurrency grew in the latter part of 2020, we have seen 2021 get off to a quick start and we are well-positioned to continue our extraordinary growth through 2021 and beyond,” said Stephen Ehrlich, co-founder and CEO of Voyager.
  • In October, Voyager moved to expand into Europe, acquiring LGO, a French cryptocurrency exchange primarily serving institutional investors.

Read more: Voyager to Pay Interest on DeFi Tokens to Gain Brokerage Clients

Más para ti

Specialized AI detects 92% of real-world DeFi exploits

hackers (Modified by CoinDesk)

New research claims specialized AI dramatically outperforms general-purpose models at detecting exploited DeFi vulnerabilities.

Lo que debes saber:

  • A purpose-built AI security agent detected vulnerabilities in 92% of 90 exploited DeFi contracts ($96.8 million in exploit value), compared with 34% and $7.5 million for a baseline GPT-5.1-based coding agent running on the same underlying model.
  • The gap came from domain-specific security methodology layered on top of the model, not differences in core AI capability, according to the report.
  • The findings come as prior research from Anthropic and OpenAI shows AI agents can execute end-to-end smart contract exploits at low cost, accelerating concerns that offensive AI capabilities are scaling faster than defensive adoption.