Black Friday: Coins give bitcoin cashback on deposit and brokerage

Coins will give cashback between November 22nd and 29th. Photo: Miloslav Hamřík, Pixabay.

A Coins multi-currency digital wallet (formerly PandaPay), which has 20 cryptocurrencies for transactions, launched a cashback campaign this Black Friday period. From today (22) to next Monday (29), whoever makes a deposit in the digital wallet will receive a bonus of up to 10% in bitcoin, with a limit of R$100.

In addition, it will refund 100% of brokerage fees when buying and selling cryptocurrencies. Coins operates with the largest number of cryptocurrencies in the country.

In the bitcoin bonus, whoever deposits up to R$1,000 in the wallet will receive cashback of 10% of the deposited amount, but in bitcoin. Therefore, whoever deposits R$500 will receive R$50 in BTC and whoever deposits R$1 thousand will receive R$100.

From R$1,000 on deposit, the cashback is R$100 in bitcoin. At 9:25 am on Monday, the price of bitcoin was in the range of US$ 57,328 (about R$ 315.3 thousand), a drop of 2.44% in 24 hours.

User needs to register with Coins to have cashback

To participate in cashback promotions, users must be registered in the Coins digital wallet.

Among the 20 cryptocurrencies available at Coins are Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Cardano (ADA), Solana (SOL), Ripple (XRP), as well as Dogecoin (DOGE), Polkadot (DOT), Litecoin (LTC) and Dash (DASH).

In late October, the company launched its new brand and app. “The Coins is simple and user-friendly for digital currency trading. In addition, it carries out payments, transfers and other operations surrounded by security and transparency that unite traditional financial services to the new digital economy”, says Marcelo Miranda, CEO of Coins.

In addition to allowing the purchase and sale of cryptocurrencies 24 hours a day, seven days a week, the digital wallet makes it possible, for example, to pay bills via a balance in reais or crypto. But it does it with the same agility as banking applications and real-time statements, says Miranda.

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