Wednesday 9 December 2015

Bitcoin - The one big speculative story of the last few years...

Forget prime central London property or the US stock market. Forget the prospector who struck gold or oil. Forget the entrepreneur who brought you this widget or that website. The game to have been playing these last few years is bitcoin.

Back in 2009 I was approached by a number of people about it. From presenting a legitimate challenge to existing monetary models, to freeing up trade and exchange, it did everything a form of money should and more. 

"Yeah," I said. "It's a crypto... what? Digital... right, ok." The sales pitch wasn't hooking me. As soon as I heard it had doubled and more, I lost interest. I don't like chasing things that have doubled, particularly if I am not sure I understand them.

I switched my focus back to gold. I'm a bloke. I can only concentrate on one thing at a time. 

More fool me. What I was shunning at a dollar because it had doubled, is now trading at $390! Me, Mr Monetary Reform, missed the wretched bitcoin boat

There's the story of Kristopher Koch, the Norwegian student who bought 5,000 bitcoins for $27 in 2009 as part of his thesis. He forgot all about them, and only found them last month. Now he's rich: 5,000 times $390 is $1,950,000!

I could have invested five hundred quid and ended up with enough to buy a house in Chelsea, a holiday home in Cornwall, funded my dad's West End musical, my own zombie film, and had enough left over to start a foundation to rehabilitate bankrupt junior mining companies.

Oh, well. Time to get over what might have been and look forward. Should we be buyingbitcoin now?

In spite of everything, I'm still not a big buyer of bitcoin

Barely a month ago I wrote about bitcoin. I admired its brilliance, but I also recommended caution. It was $130 or $140 then, or just above. It's pretty much tripled since. Wrong again.

But I'm not changing my mind now. 

People get very passionate about their investments. And when the investment has a political overtone to it – which alternative forms of money such as gold and bitcoincertainly do - that passion goes into overdrive. Pass a negative opinion about gold orbitcoin and you risk the wrath of their owners. 

Still, I have to say, for all its qualities, I think there is too much speculative excess inbitcoin at the moment. People find it hard enough to value gold – but how do you valuebitcoin? It's got a limited supply in its favour (there are about 12 million so far, and an upper limit of 21 million). But could someone find a way of replicating them? I'm told not, but who knows? 

And there are plenty of other risks. Quite apart from the recent closure of online black market Silk Road, bitcoin heists are a fairly regular occurrence. Tech website Pando Daily notes that a bitcoin exchange in China shut down last month, taking about $4.1m in users' money with it. 

I'm not saying it is, but it could turn out to be a huge bubble, a Ponzi scheme even. If it does all unravel, it will look obvious after the event.

The bigger problems facing bitcoin

But assuming bitcoin is here to stay, there are two bigger issues. The first is that bitcoin is meant to be a medium of exchange. That's what it's so useful for. 

Trouble is, I hang on to the few bitcoins I have. They're rising in value so fast, I'd rather spend my pounds or dollars. I've also made it possible to buy my book with bitcoins – in fact, I'd rather receive bitcoins than pounds. 

This is a form of Gresham's Law at work: bad money driving out the good. In Sir Thomas Gresham's time (the 16th century), this referred to people's tendency to hoard currency with a higher precious metal content, and spend 'bad' money instead. 

Clearly, this is one of the issues with being an independent currency in a world where central banks are hell-bent on devaluing their own paper. I don't think it's entirely coincidence that bitcoin's recent surge in value coincides with the European Central Bank cutting a key interest rate from 0.5% to 0.25%. There's also the recent International Monetary Fund report which suggested it would be a good idea to impose a one-off wealth tax to recapitalise debt-ridden nations. Perhaps that has driven some bitcoin buying too, as Europeans seek to hide wealth.

But if bitcoin is to become useful as a more mainstream medium of exchange – rather than one that is preserved for transactions of a shifty nature – its value has to at least stabilise, if not fall. So that argues against its stellar rise continuing forever.

The second concern is that people are starting to take bitcoin seriously. One of the senior economists at the Chicago branch of the US Federal Reserve Bank has even written a research report on them. And it's not dismissive either – in fact, it shows a very good understanding of the currency and its potential.

This is all very good. But as I mentioned before, the more seriously bitcoin gets taken, the more that governments will come after it. They may not be able to crush the crypto-currency concept now that it's out there. But they may well be able to tame it with regulation. When push comes to shove, there's no way that governments are going to cede control over one of the key things that gives them their legitimacy and power – the monopoly over currency issuance. 

All in all, I'm sticking with my call of last month. Own some bitcoins. Accumulate more if you can, but only with speculative funds you can afford to lose. I suspect a rollercoaster ride lies ahead. 

It's actually quite easy to buy bitcoins, though it looks quite daunting at first. In most cases you open an account, deposit some money and you're off. The world's largest exchange is Mt Gox. Blockchain lays it out conveniently for UK users. 

Bitbargain also has an online tutorial. It takes a bit of getting used to – start with very small amounts while you get to grips with the process – but it's actually wonderfully simple.

The Smart Way to Acquire Bitcoin >> http://www.ibourl.net/bitclub3 <<

Call me Adrian Hibbert on +44 7966 871854

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