The Hamilton Spectator

Rise of bitcoin competitor Ripple creates wealth to rival Zuckerberg

- NATHANIEL POPPER SAN FRANCISCO —

The virtual currency boom has gotten so heated that it is throwing the list of the world’s richest people into disarray.

Consider what has happened to the founders of an upstart virtual currency known as Ripple, which has seen its value skyrocket in recent weeks.

At one point Thursday, Chris Larsen, a Ripple co-founder who is also the largest holder of Ripple tokens, was worth more than $59 billion, according to figures from Forbes. That would have briefly vaulted Larsen ahead of Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg into fifth place on the Forbes list of the world’s richest people.

Other top Ripple holders would have also zoomed up that list as the value of their tokens soared more than 100 per cent during the last week — and more than 30,000 per cent in the last year. The boom has turned Ripple into the second largest virtual currency, within striking distance of the original behemoth, bitcoin.

The explosion in Ripple’s value over the past month is the starkest illustrati­on yet of how the mania around bitcoin has spilled over into a broader universe of virtual currencies. These coins — with names like Cardano, Stellar and Iota — are generally new twists on the bitcoin technology, which uses a decentrali­zed network of volunteer computers to keep a record, known as a blockchain, of all transactio­ns.

While most of these currencies were worth nearly nothing a year ago, many are now responsibl­e for creating billionair­es — albeit with rapidly fluctuatin­g fortunes. If this is a tulip fever, the fever has spread to chrysanthe­mums and poppies.

Larsen’s soaring wealth sparked a few congratula­tory messages on Twitter on Thursday, even if the value of Ripple — and his Forbes ranking — dropped later in the day. But his net worth, and the ballooning value of Ripple tokens, mostly drew comments about the irrational­ity of the virtual currency markets, which appear to be largely driven these days by the fear of missing out, or FOMO.

“This is beyond insane,” said Jeremy Gardner, an investor who previously worked at the virtual currency hedge fund Blockchain Capital, which invested in Ripple. “There’s absolutely nothing driving this rally except rampant FOMO, misinforma­tion, and speculatio­n.”

Ripple, whose tokens are known as XRP, is far from the only virtual currency being fuelled by the hysteria. In 2017, there were 29 tokens, including Einsteiniu­m and Byteball.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Chris Larsen is a co-founder of Ripple, a virtual currency that, based on value, is the second largest behind bitcoin.
NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Chris Larsen is a co-founder of Ripple, a virtual currency that, based on value, is the second largest behind bitcoin.

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