IDCG formed International Digital Currency Markets (IDCM) after identifying fundamental flaws in both centralized and decentralized exchange models. Neither approach fully addressed the core trade-off
IDCG formed International Digital Currency Markets (IDCM) after identifying fundamental flaws in both centralized and decentralized exchange models. Neither approach fully addressed the core trade-offs, so the company built IDCM to combine the strengths of each.
Centralized exchanges struggle with multiple structural problems. They manage credit and counterparty risk, navigate operational complexity, and create security vulnerabilities. Traders don't benefit from uniform access or treatment. Decentralized exchanges present different obstacles. High-volume periods cause transaction delays, trading costs spike, assets can't cross blockchains, and traders can't deposit fiat currency.
IDCM pairs decentralized architecture with a network of supernodes designed to accelerate transaction processing. The development team built this consensus mechanism to boost transaction speed while managing trading volume. Network participants engage in governance decisions, maintaining the transparency of decentralized systems and the performance of centralized ones.
Security combines multiple layers. Bank-grade encryption works alongside multi-signature distributed storage. The platform also deploys AI monitoring systems. Together they protect traders' funds with institutional-level safeguards.
Liquidity flows from two sources. Member exchanges share a common pool, and over-the-counter trades feed additional capital into the system. This arrangement delivers 5 times more liquidity than centralized exchanges provide. Traders access improved bid-ask spreads and deeper order books.
Independent audits verify transactions and prevent market manipulation. This institutional-grade oversight sets IDCM apart from platforms that conceal their operations.
IDCM functions as an alliance system. Exchanges can join by passing a voting process and obtaining licenses to operate in their home country. The structure creates a global legal framework and eliminates pump-and-dump schemes that devastate retail traders on centralized platforms.
Alliance members maintain operational independence. They keep ownership of their client base. When traders register through an alliance member, they join the shared liquidity pool and access better pricing. Members gain network infrastructure and expanded reach while maintaining control of their operations.
Running operations on IDCM costs less than building independent infrastructure. The platform provides training and technical support to all members. Onboarding requires only a domain name and payment. The system handles everything else. The timeline from initial inquiry to full launch spans five days.
Deposits start at 100 units of USDT or VHKD with no deposit fees. Withdrawal fees vary depending on the token or currency. Trading fees sit at 0.1%, with alliance members retaining 75% of the revenue generated from trades.
The core team includes cryptocurrency veterans, former Wall Street professionals, and staff from the Australian Securities Exchange, Deutsche Bank, Accenture's blockchain division, and UBS. The management roster features talent from NASA, Google, Goldman Sachs, McKinsey & Co., IBM, and Huawei.
The platform handles both spot trading and fiat over-the-counter trades. Primary trading pairs include BTC, ETH, USDT, VHKD, and IT. The HTML5 interface works across devices and operating systems. Investors recover their initial investment within one month.