Saskatoon StarPhoenix

‘Dr. Doom’ economist describes Bitcoin as ‘mother of all bubbles’

- MARGI MURPHY

SAN FRANCISCO The economist who predicted the 2008 financial crash has warned American politician­s that Bitcoin is “the mother of all scams.”

Nouriel Roubini, a fierce critic of virtual currency known as ‘Dr. Doom’ for his bearish stances, took aim at the blockchain technology underpinni­ng cryptocurr­ency. It is often hailed as transforma­tive, even by those cynical about digital coins.

“Blockchain is the most overhyped technology ever,” the New York University professor told the U.S. Senate banking committee.

“No asset class in human history has ever experience­d such a rapid boom and total utter bust and implosion. … It is nothing better than a glorified spreadshee­t or database.

“It is clear by now that Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies represent the mother of all bubbles,” he added.

He made all the familiar arguments about cryptocurr­encies: That they have no intrinsic value; that they impose transactio­n costs that are too high for small payments, making them useless as currencies; and that they use up too much energy to generate.

He warned that Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurr­ency, was deflationa­ry in nature because of its finite supply (in a growing economy, that means prices denominate­d in Bitcoin cannot but fall) and that most of the other virtual currencies “have an arbitrary supply-generation mechanism that is worse than any fiat currency.”

Roubini pointed to research showing that almost four-fifths of all initial coin offerings have been outright scams.

He argued that the crypto economy was concentrat­ed in dodgy jurisdicti­ons such as China and Russia, and that it created a wealth inequality “greater than that of Kim Jong-un land.”

Roubini said the nickname “s– coins,” used by cryptocurr­ency traders referring to less valuable coins, was “a grave insult to manure.”

The attack contradict­s proponents of blockchain, including the British government’s science office. It came as the cryptocurr­ency market took a battering off the back of tumbling global stock markets.

Bitcoin dropped as much as 6.9 per cent to US$6,080, its lowest point in two months. At its peak late last year Bitcoin was worth $20,000.

Traders claim Bitcoin’s selling point is that its decentrali­zed nature leaves it immune from stock market volatility, acting more like a “digital gold.” But it appears investors are using traditiona­l equity strategies, suggesting the crypto market could dip farther if the stock markets continue downward.

Matt Newton, market analyst at cryptocurr­ency exchange platform eToro, said the fall was “a sign that the markets are working ” and that “much of the ‘good news’ is currently happening behind the scenes.”

Government­s are mulling whether to regulate cryptocurr­encies, which critics claim are vehicles for scams and money laundering.

 ?? MUNSHI AHMED/BLOOMBERG ?? Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics LLC, notes that cryptocurr­encies are concentrat­ed in such dodgy jurisdicti­ons as China and Russia.
MUNSHI AHMED/BLOOMBERG Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics LLC, notes that cryptocurr­encies are concentrat­ed in such dodgy jurisdicti­ons as China and Russia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada