Monerium issues money on blockchains. It is the first company authorized to issue e-money tokens under existing European e-money regulations, Directive 2009/110/EC.
Monerium tokens are not listed on exchanges, instead the company operates a gateway which enables direct transfers of funds between bank accounts and blockchain wallets.
The Monerium euro token, EURe, is available on the Ethereum and Polygon mainnets and is in trials on Algorand. The company has also issued small amounts of USDe, GBPe, and ISKe.
E-money is a “technically neutral digital alternative to cash" which has been used in Europe since 2000 and will be required for fiat-linked "stablecoins" under MiCA and proposed UK crypto-asset rules.
E-money is over-collateralized with user funds and issuer reserve capital safeguarded in segregated assets, either high quality and liquid securities, bank deposits, or both.
Monerium tokens are not listed on exchanges, instead the company operates a gateway which enables direct transfers of funds between bank accounts and blockchain wallets.
The Monerium euro token, EURe, is available on the Ethereum and Polygon mainnets and is in trials on Algorand. The company has also issued small amounts of USDe, GBPe, and ISKe.
E-money is a “technically neutral digital alternative to cash" which has been used in Europe since 2000 and will be required for fiat-linked "stablecoins" under MiCA and proposed UK crypto-asset rules.
E-money is over-collateralized with user funds and issuer reserve capital safeguarded in segregated assets, either high quality and liquid securities, bank deposits, or both.