Wences Casares

Wences Casares
Born Wenceslao Casares
(1974-02-26) February 26, 1974
Patagonia, Argentina
Residence Palo Alto, California, U.S.
Occupation CEO and Founder of Xapo

Wences Casares is a technology entrepreneur with global business experience specializing in technology and financial ventures. He is an advocate of the Bitcoin revolution and he has said he believes that Bitcoin will be bigger than the internet.[1]

He is the founder and CEO of Xapo, a Bitcoin wallet startup based in Palo Alto, California.[2] Xapo is said to be the largest custodian of bitcoin in the world.[3] Xapo has raised $40 million from leading Silicon Valley venture capital firms.[4]

Casares sits on the board of PayPal, the world’s largest fintech company[5] and, as part of his non-profit activities, he serves on the board of Endeavor,[6] a non-profit organization that promotes high-impact entrepreneurship in emerging markets and that was instrumental in his early success and he also serves on the board of Kiva,[7] a non-profit organization with a mission to connect people through lending to alleviate poverty worldwide.

Originally from Patagonia, Argentina, Casares launched one of the first Internet Service Provider, Internet Argentina S.A. in 1994, a company he would go on to sell in order to found the Argentine online brokerage Patagon in 1997. Patagon established itself as Latin America's first comprehensive Internet financial services portal and expanded its online banking services to the United States, Spain, and Germany. Patagon was acquired by the Spanish bank, Banco Santander for $750 million but then argentinian justice ordered the seizure of the company and the clients' accounts. The episode was a typical case of a dot-com bubble company.

Casares founded Wanako Games,(currently Behaviour Interactive), a videogame developer headquartered in New York City with development based out of Santiago, Chile. Wanako Games developed the award winning game Assault Heroes honored as "Game of the Year" for Microsoft Xbox Live in 2006, and was acquired by Activision.[8]

In 2002 Casares along with his partners founded Banco Lemon, a retail bank for the underbanked in Brazil. Banco do Brasil, Brazil's largest bank, acquired Banco Lemon in June 2009.[9]

Casares was the founder and CEO of Lemon, a digital wallet platform. In 2013 the American firm LifeLock bought Lemon for about $43 million (US).[10]

From 2004-2007 Casares and his family circumnavigated the globe aboard their sailing catamaran, Simpatica.[11]

He is an elected member of the World Economic Forum's “Young Global Leaders” Class of 2011[12] and regularly attends the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland[13] and he is a member of the Young Presidents' Organization. He studied business administration for three years at the University of San Andrés, in Buenos Aires, and completed the Owner/President Management Program at Harvard University. He also spent one year as a Rotary Exchange Student in 1991-1992 in Washington, Pennsylvania in the USA.

References

  1. http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2015/07/wences_casares.html
  2. Swisher, Kara (13 March 2014). "Lemon Digital Wallet Founder Wences Casares Gets $20 Million in Funding for Bitcoin Startup Xapo". Re/Code. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  3. http://www.businessinsider.com/how-bitcoin-may-have-more-impact-than-the-internet-2015-2
  4. http://www.theverge.com/2014/8/29/6082195/the-fort-knox-of-bitcoin-xapo-wences-casares
  5. https://investor.paypal-corp.com/directors.cfm
  6. http://endeavor.org/network/board-team/
  7. http://www.kiva.org/about/team/advisors
  8. http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/103778/Vivendi_Acquires_Wanako_Games.php
  9. http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20090716006343/en/Banco-Brasil-Acquires-Banco-Lemon-Correspondent-Branch
  10. http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/blog/2013/12/lemon-sold-to-lifelock-for-426-million.html
  11. Simpatica
  12. http://www.weforum.org/young-global-leaders/wences-casares
  13. http://www.cnbc.com/2015/01/22/bitcoin-finds-a-place-among-the-worlds-elite.html
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