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CoinList wants to make investing in ICOs less risky

More than $3.3 billion in funding has now been raised via initial coin offerings (ICOs), according to CoinDesk. That figure was just $200 million at this time one year ago.

In an ICO (or “token sale”), a startup (one that usually has digital currency or blockchain at its core) sells its own digital tokens, for later use in their ecosystem, in exchange for existing digital currencies like bitcoin or ether. There is no guarantee the token will accrue value, and the buyers of the tokens get no real equity in the company. The tokens are not really akin to stock, though many have compared ICOs to IPOs.

In ICOs, these companies see a fast way to raise (an often obscene amount of) capital, and investors see an instant entry into the crypto world for people who, in many cases, think they missed out already on bitcoin and may be kicking themselves.

But ICOs are extremely risky, and many are likely fraudulent. Most of the companies doing token sales have not yet launched a product, but simply put out a white paper on what they intend to launch.

CoinList wants to change that.

The company, which spun out from AngelList last month, is a compliance-focused services provider for token sales. It lists ICOs, but only for companies it has thoroughly vetted, and it’s also selling a back-end, white label compliance service.

“We’re being very picky” with ICOs

The first part of the business is investor-facing: think of CoinList as a highly selective Nasdaq for ICOs. So far, it has listed just two: Filecoin, which raised $205 million in August, most of it in the first hour; and Blockstack, formerly called OneName, which opened up its token sale on Nov. 1.

For those token sales, CoinList says it did extensive due diligence before launching the sale. Then it launched the token sales on its own site, so investors bought the tokens through CoinList, paying in US dollars, bitcoin or ether.

The second part of the business is purely a B2B play: CoinList could provide compliance checks and services to companies looking to IPO without listing their ICO on CoinList.

“We’re being very picky and we have a really strict diligence process,” says CoinList CEO Andy Bromberg. “We’re looking for a history of shipping product: that these companies actually know how to build things, and they’re not going to do a white paper and then struggle to actually build anything.”

Bromberg, 23, was a founding member of the Stanford Bitcoin Group. His professor there was Balaji Srinivasan, a board partner at Andreessen Horowitz and the founder of 21.co, which rebranded this month to Earn.com and has raised an eye-popping $121 million.