The New Medici Bank Is About to Take On Its First Crypto Clients

A new crypto-friendly bank with a historic pedigree is about to take on its first clients.

Revealed exclusively to CoinDesk, Medici Bank is launching into private beta in October. The Puerto Rico-based bank will be testing the digital onboarding process, web portals and its application programming interface with five companies from around the globe.

Two or three of those companies will be crypto businesses and at least one of them will be an exchange, Ed Boyle, CEO of Medici, told CoinDesk. Such firms are instructive to bring on during a testing phase to see if the bank’s systems can scale to accommodate trading volumes.

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“Crypto companies are high-throughput types of clients,” Ed Boyle, CEO of Medici, said. “If we can handle that, we can handle anything.”

Founded by Prince Lorenzo de’ Medici, a descendant of the Renaissance-era Italian banking family, Medici Bank will join the short list of financial institutions that welcoming to crypto companies.

Most banks are loath to serve the sector because the perceived risk of money laundering makes compliance expensive relative to the revenue generated by the account. The handful of U.S. banks willing to bank crypto firms includes Silvergate in California and Signature, Metropolitan Commercial and Quontic Bank in New York. Fidor Bank in Germany, whose U.S. operations Boyle used to oversee, also has crypto clients.

“There are [fewer] than 10 banks on the entire planet that are crypto-friendly,” Boyle said.

$1 billion goal

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By the end of the year, Medici bank will go into open beta, a not fully operational environment with a restricted number of users. The bank plans to fully launch in the first quarter of 2020 with a goal of $1 billion in combined deposits and assets under management within three years.

Medici aims to have a clientele split evenly between fintech companies (including crypto businesses), import-export companies and private wealth clients, “but don’t know when we’ll achieve something that looks like parity,” Boyle said. “Just as fighters have a plan until they get punched in the mouth and no battle plan survives first contact with the enemy, we fully expect our plans to adjust greatly after we get to market.”

While the bank’s appetite for banking crypto companies is not limitless, Medici is willing to have up to a third or half of its total business be crypto clients, Boyle said.

Licensed as an International Financial Entity (IFE) by Puerto Rico’s Office of the Commission of Financial Institutions, Medici Bank has six employees and plans to have 20 by the end of this year, 50 by the end of 2020 and 100 by the end of 2021.