[ad_1]

Cryptocurrency exchange Bitstamp has decided not to move further with the inactive fee plan.

Webp.net-resizeimage - 2022-07-07T112948.525.jpg

“We have taken everyone’s concerns on board and have decided to cancel the inactivity fee,” Bitstamp CEO JB Graftieaux said in a press release statement. “Listening to our customers is part of our service DNA. Bitstamp’s goal has always been to be a secure, reliable trading platform that provides industry-leading services, and we do not intend to deviate from our path.”

Bitstamp has decided to scrap the inactivity fee plan, citing customers’ concerns following the announcement, The Block reported.

Earlier, the Luxembourg-based exchange had announced that as of August 1, it will start charging a monthly 10 euro fee to users with an inactive account to make up for costs.

The company had also announced that the charges would be applicable to customers with balances of less than 200 euros that had not made any transactions or performed staking in the past year, excluding those based in the United States.

Previously, the crypto exchange had said that some customers had shared concerns about the blog explaining the inactivity fee plan. The plan to roll out the inactivity fee would have come at a time when crypto exchanges globally are witnessing a decline in trading volumes across the market.

According to The Block, most exchanges earn their revenue from charging fees on trading volumes. However, those fees have dropped abruptly alongside the price of cryptos since the beginning of the year. The Block shared data that showed that volumes across exchanges have declined from $2.2 trillion in May 2021 to approximately $622 billion in June.

Image source: Shutterstock

[ad_2]

blockchain.news

Previous articleJapan’s gaming blockchain builder Oasys raises $20M in private token sale – TechCrunch
Next articleCast your votes for roundtable topics at TechCrunch Disrupt – TechCrunch