It also operates a cryptocurrency exchange and provides institutional markets lending business and data, charts, and analytics.
[3] The company's board members include: Smith; co-founder Nicolas Cary; Antony Jenkins;[4] Jim Messina, the former deputy chief of staff for Barack Obama;[1] and Jeremy Liew, a partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners.
[6] Investors in the company include partners of DST Global, Lightspeed Venture Partners, VY Capital,[1] GV,[6] Baillie Gifford,[7] Lakestar, Eldridge, Kyle Bass, Access Industries, Moore Strategic Ventures and Rovida Advisors.
[9] In early 2012, Reeves and Brian Armstrong, the co-founder of crypto-currency exchange Coinbase, applied to Y Combinator's summer class.
[19][2] In February 2021, Blockchain.com raised a $120 million funding round from investors including Moore Strategic Ventures, Kyle Bass, Access Industries, Rovida Advisors, Lightspeed Venture Partners, GV, Lakestar, and Eldridge.
[20] Including previous venture capital funding rounds, the company had raised $190 million altogether.
In 2022, Blockchain.com's CEO wrote to shareholders informing them that Three Arrows Capital rapidly becoming insolvent meant a default impact of approximately $270 million worth of cryptocurrency and US dollar loans to Blockchain.com.
[5] Its main products are its cryptocurrency wallet, exchange, block explorer, and institutional markets offering.
Its wallets can be used to send and receive digital currency transactions, as well as swap between different cryptocurrencies.
The company has an exchange to allow its users to buy, sell, and trade cryptocurrencies.
[16] Additionally, the exchange's user interface can be customized by traders to show them relevant information depending on their level of experience.
[25] The company's institutional markets business provides cryptocurrency lending, borrowing, trading and custody of financial assets.
[2][27] The company operates a blockchain explorer that allows the user to see public cryptocurrency transactions and related information.