Strike In Argentina, One Month Later: What Happened And What Is It Good For?

Strike launches in Argentina, Promo material

A month ago, with fanfare, Strike launched its App to the Argentinian market. A country facing ever-increasing inflation and an app that promises access to Bitcoin, “the best monetary network in human history.” The match seemed undeniable. However, an underwhelming first version of the app mixed with questionable technology usage tainted Strike’s launch.

Less than a week since the app was available, CEO Jack Mallers announced it was the “#5 Finance App in Argentina.”

Nowadays, it sits at #63. What happened?

Wait… You Can’t Hold Bitcoin In The Wallet?

When Bitcoinist announced Strike’s Argentinean attack, Bitcoin was the only sure thing in the equation:

“This is where Strike comes in. With the app, “the Argentinian people can now hold a stable cash balance that can be spent both instantly and with no fees.” And it all runs using the Lightning Network as rails. That means Bitcoin, “the best monetary asset and the best monetary network in human history.”

That sounded solid. However, the initial users noticed a tremendous omission. You can’t hold bitcoin in the Strike wallet. You can’t buy or sell bitcoin. In fact, in Argentina, Strike exchanges every bitcoin you get for Ethereum based USDT. You can receive payments through the Lightning Network, but it immediately converts your sats into USDT. Hmmmmm?…

Does Strike Uses The Lightning Network Or Ethereum?

It’s a valid question. So much so, that some crypto publications called Strike out on it. 

“Although the solution is being promoted as being Bitcoin technology-based, it’s actually based on the Ethereum network. Being the Tether USD (USDT) stablecoin, under the ERC-20 token technology standard.”

A deeper look under the hood by Bitcoin Magazine doesn’t offer much comfort on the Ethereum front:

“Strike enables Bitcoin transactions and Lightning payments without requiring (or allowing) users to directly touch bitcoin by purchasing BTC and transacting it through Lightning on their behalf. And according to the app’s terms of service, a user’s USDT balance in Argentina is held in the custody of cryptocurrency exchange Bittrex Global.”

So, Bittrex receives your sats and sends USDT. And if, for example, you pay a Lightning invoice, Bittrex receives your USDT and sends sats. So, Strike Argentina kind of uses both Bitcoin and Ethereum. Plus, Bittrex.

BTC price chart for 02/15/2022 on Bittrex | Source: BTC/USD on TradingView.com

What Can Strike Argentina Do?

Even though the launch was kind of a mess, it should be said that it’s equivalent to the way Strike launched in El Salvador. The first implementation used Tether (USDT) and didn’t let you buy or sell bitcoin. As a review of the Argentinean version of Strike, Adam Dub said, it’s “a custodial USDT wallet without fiat on-ramp but with BTC on and off-ramps. A fast, apparently cheap, but not private way to convert USDT to sats and vice versa.”

Adam Dub also confirmed that: 

And we would add:

How can the app compete with the Argentinean-born solutions already in the market?

Conclusions And Competition

When it comes to cryptocurrency, Argentina is a pretty sophisticated market. The country’s tech industry is ever-active and some of the world’s leading software, like Muun wallet, is Argentinean-born. Other apps that serve as an interface between the bitcoin network and the financial system are already active. Like Belo, Lemon, and BuenBit.

How can Strike compete without offering Pesos? How can it compete without providing a bridge to the traditional banking system? Perhaps by using bitcoin, the world’s open network of choice? Maybe, but they’re barely using it so far. However, let’s remember that this is Strike’s first try with Argentina. And that the company has a history of improving its offerings and adding services little by little.

Featured Image: Launch in Argentina, promo material. From this tweet | Charts by TradingView
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