Alfred
F. Kelly Jr., the CEO of Visa, said that no companies have officially
joined Libra. At this stage, the 20-some companies involved with the
foundation have reportedly only declared interest via a nonbinding
letter of intent.
According to an apparent transcript of a Q3 2019 earnings call for Visa dated July 23, Kelly said:
"We
have signed a nonbinding letter of intent to join Libra. We're one of –
I think it's 27 companies that have expressed that interest. So no one
has yet officially joined."
As per the
transcript, Kelly was responding to an inquiry from Bryan C. Keane — an
analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities. Keane said there was “some
confusion in the market” and asked whether Libra would be “a strategic
partner for Visa or potential disruptive threat.”
Regarding
Visa’s intended involvement, Kelly said that the company thinks Libra
would benefit the company, provided that it can meet regulatory
requirements:
“We're in discussions and our
ultimate decision to join will be determined by a number of factors,
including obviously the ability of the association to satisfy all the
requisite regulatory requirements. So, Bryan, in my estimation, it's
really, really early days and there's just a tremendous amount to be
finalized. But obviously, given that we've expressed interest, we
actually believe we could be additive and helpful in the association.”
As
previously reported by Cointelegraph, Libra has been criticized for its
choice to entrust its governance to a consortium of corporate entities.
On June 14, cryptographer Sarah Jamie Lewis wrote:
“Can't
wait for a cryptocurrency with the ethics of Uber, the censorship
resistance of Paypal, and the centralization of Visa, all tied together
under the proven privacy of Facebook.”
Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez also called
Libra a “currency controlled by an undemocratically-selected coalition
of largely massive corporations” and challenged Calibra head David
Marcus’ views on sovereign currency in one of the recent congressional
hearings on Libra.
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