Bitcoin Is Just a Bit Player
By David Smith, Originally Published
on Money
Metals Exchange
Over the last few years,
so-called "crypto-currencies" – digital equivalents of a monetary
exchange unit, have been all the rage. The most well-known in the category,
Bitcoin, has had quite a run.
Starting out as a
"virtual penny stock" it rose in 2014 to the elevated height of
$1,150, before crashing back to earth. This "electronic currency" is
created and stored in a computerized "wallet." Purchases and sales
are made via a "blockchain" which keeps a memory of every transaction
conducted. Private keys (supposedly) provide assurance that a Bitcoin holder's
account is safe.
In less than three years,
two seminal events have served to give bitcoin users financial heartburn. They
give Inquiring Minds (readers of this column?) a serious reason to put on their
thinking caps, before jumping to the conclusion that crypto-currencies can be
viable challengers to what history teaches us is real money – gold and silver.
In February, 2014, the
Tokyo-based bitcoin exchange, Mt. Gox, which at the time handled 70% of all
bitcoin transactions, suspended trading and filed for bankruptcy after 850,000 bitcoins went missing. Then in early
August 2016, 119,000 bitcoin worth $70 million were stolen from a Hong Kong
exchange – one of the world's largest.
These two events alone
should fully justify safety concerns. More important than the theft itself was
what the exchange decided to do about it. They decreed that account users who
bore no responsibility for the loss, would still be subject to a 35%
"bail-in" (exchange-approved theft) to make up for it.
Hackers
Are Unleashing Sophisticated Malware to Rob Bitcoin Owners Blind
In what turned out to be
prophetic comments, less than two years before the events discussed above,
Nadeem Walayat, Editor of The Market Oracle, stated he believed that “thieves
have been busy producing a whole host of bitcoin wallet malware that seeks to
steal any wallets that they find on infected computers.” As new bitcoins are
"mined" and the blockchain becomes more complex to operate, Walayat
warned:
“...what bitcoin holders are going to be increasingly
exposed to, is ever more sophisticated malware that are aimed at the theft of
their bitcoin holdings at every stage of the process, starting right from their
internet connected desktop PC’s to the interception of transactions between
servers to the wild west bitcoin exchanges that can disappear with all of their
customers bitcoin holdings overnight, to the highly sophisticated bot net
infected mining pools that seek to target all bitcoins in existence by seeking
to rewrite who owns what.”
Yet crypto-currencies do
have a few things going for them, and maybe someday they will find acceptance
and utility among the general population. They offer a certain amount of
financial privacy. Funds can be transferred to any point on the globe.
A few businesses already
accept Bitcoin in payment (including Money Metals Exchange). Their volatility
means that holders have upside potential – BT recently traded as high as $788
(currently trading at $575.)
But are these benefits
enough if you wake up some morning to find out that the site who you've
entrusted with your BT has been hacked (robbed) and you're informed that you're
going to be "bailed-in" to help restore the funds of other site
holders?
Cash in
the Bank Could Actually Be Safer Than Bitcoin
If this kind of risk
appeals to you, why not just continue to keep all your liquid assets in bank
CDs, non-interest bearing savings accounts, or money market funds? Soon enough
you'll have to pay them to hold your money via negative interest rates (NIRP).
You'll have new fees added to your non-interest-bearing accounts, and
"redemption gates" – limitations on how much of your own money you
can withdraw.
It brings to mind the
exchange between two peasants, in the classic film The Magnificent Seven. They
were discussing whether or not they should resist the continued thievery of the
Mexican bandit Calvera and his gang, or just put up with their periodic
depredations. "But they never steal all our corn!" responded one
campesino who voted not to resist.
Eventually if/when your
bank gets into trouble – even through no fault of your own, you may be
"volunteered" to give up 20-30% of your account in a "bail
in" to help cover their mismanagement. A few years ago, a Spanish bank
took it a step further – forcing account holders to convert their cash to the
bank's stock... which promptly lost 90% of its value!
This fall, regulatory agencies will no longer
require money market funds to promise that your shares will drop no lower than
$1. In the past, his sacrosanct rule served as a guarantee that you could never
lose your principal.
Now, that can change at
any time, allowing the net asset value of the fund to close below $1 and stay
there – in the trade called "breaking the buck." Thus, on any
business day of the week, you may lose some of your money market funds on
deposit.
In 2010, the SEC voted 4-1
to authorize the 'legal' suspension of money market redemptions. They wrote
"We understand that suspending redemptions may impose hardships on
investors who rely on their ability to redeem shares." Translation: You
are in their thoughts and prayers, but they can still decide to prohibit
withdrawals from your own account.
As the checkered history
of upstart "money substitutes" like Bitcoin has shown, those who have
control over the disposition of funds of any second party will sooner or later
find a way to debase (steal) some if not all of it from the person who thinks
he/she "owns" it.
Over two years ago, David
Morgan wrote the following in an article titled "My Two Bits about
Bitcoin," which you can read on his blog here:
Looking at what has taken place, especially over the last
year or so, I must conclude with this simple – and to my thinking –
self-evident statement. Whereas Bitcoins
can vanish, Gold cannot. Just remember for all who read this, the timeless
advice of – caveat emptor! And may the Free Market Reign.
It's likely Bitcoin will
go through more "jury trials" – efforts at sustaining public
acceptance – before it is either fully approved of, or tossed into history's
waste bin. But while we wait to find out, I'd say that, in some very important
ways compared to gold, Bitcoin has so far proven itself to be nothing more than
a two-bit interloper.

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