By Jaspreet Kalra
NAGPUR, India (Reuters) - Like thousands of his countrymen in far-flung places, flower-shop owner Ashish Nagose has been learning about trading cryptocurrencies by attending classes every weekday for the past two months in his home city of Nagpur in western India.
Nagose has bought and sold stock options earlier but is now venturing into cryptocurrencies as regulators have made it harder to trade equity derivatives in India. The 28-year-old believes the red-hot crypto asset class can help shield his family-owned flower shop during downturns.
"I want to run my family shop, and hope that trading can provide a steady income when business slows down, like in the month after (the Hindu festival of) Diwali," he said, seated at the storefront surrounded by bunches of red roses and orange marigolds.
Newfound crypto enthusiasts in India such as Nagose have helped grow cumulative trading volumes of bitcoin, ethereum, dogecoin and other cryptocurrencies on four of its largest exchanges more than two-fold quarter-on-quarter to $1.9 billion in the October-December quarter, according to data from aggregator CoinGecko.
Many young Indians are dabbling in crypto trading to supplement their regular income in the world's most populous country where jobs and pay increases have lagged world-beating economic growth. Nearly two-thirds of its 1.4 billion people are below the age of 35, according to a government report.
From stocks and derivatives, they are now gravitating towards crypto assets whose prices have soared after U.S. President Donald Trump's election victory in November promised a looser regulatory regime for the asset.
"There is a lot of curiosity at the ground level ... especially with Trump becoming the U.S. president and the entire flavour of crypto changing world over," said Edul Patel, co-founder of Mudrex, an Indian crypto exchange.
Overall, India's crypto market is expected to grow to more than $15 billion in 2035 from $2.5 billion last year at a compound annual growth rate of 18.5%, said Kush Wadhwa, partner at consulting firm Grant Thornton Bharat.
Retail traders have driven the bulk of the interest in the asset, according to exchange executives, even as ETFs and institutions have pushed up crypto prices globally.
Out of the top 10 centres that propelled crypto activity in India in 2024, seven were lower-tiered cities, such as Jaipur, Lucknow and Pune, according to CoinSwitch, one of India's largest crypto platforms.
"Growth is now being driven by non-metro cities. That's true for the stock world and it's true for crypto," said Balaji Srihari, vice president at CoinSwitch which has 20 million users.