Toronto Star

It was meant to be the better Bitcoin. It’s down nearly 90%

Bitcoin Cash was conceived as a way to make bitcoin a mainstream payment tool

- ALEXANDER OSIPOVICH

The bear market in cryptocurr­encies has punished investors who bought bitcoin at the height of cryptomani­a last year. But losses have been even more brutal for those who invested in once-promising rivals of bitcoin.

Consider Bitcoin Cash, an offshoot of bitcoin that launched on August 1, 2017, which moves independen­tly of bitcoin itself. While bitcoin has fallen 68% from its record intraday high of $20,089 in December, Bitcoin Cash is down a crushing 88% from its peak of $4,355.62, according to CoinMarket­Cap.com. On Thursday, it traded at around $529.

Hundreds of other coins have also plummeted in value, but the underperfo­rmance of Bitcoin Cash is notable because it touches on a bigger theme: whether virtual currencies can really become a means of payment that would supplant traditiona­l money.

Supporters of Bitcoin Cash conceived it as a way to fix problems that they believed were impeding bitcoin from becoming a mainstream payment tool, akin to PayPal or Visa.

Boosters—including Roger Ver, a prominent crypto investor often called Bitcoin Jesus— argued that the original bitcoin network had become too slow and that users were paying overly hefty fees for sending each other bitcoins. This faction contended that bitcoin’s clunkiness was causing people to treat it as a store of value, like gold, and not as a practical way to buy Big Macs or cappuccino­s.

There is still a lively debate over whether bitcoin is any good as a medium of exchange. Many bitcoin holders view it as a hedge against the collapse of government-backed currencies, but don’t often use it to pay for things.

After waging an unsuccessf­ul campaign to change bitcoin from within, the rebels broke off and created Bitcoin Cash, in a so-called fork that bitterly split the virtual-currency community. The underlying technology of the new cryptocurr­ency was almost identical to that of bitcoin, except for tweaks aimed at speeding up transactio­ns and lowering fees.

One year later, some research suggests the breakaway coin hasn’t lived up to its promises. A study of activity by major cryptocurr­ency payment processors—which help businesses accept payments in crypto—found that just $3.8 million worth of payments were made in Bitcoin Cash in May. That is down from $10.5 million in March, according to Chainalysi­s, an analytics firm that carried out the study.

Backers of Bitcoin Cash note that payments in bitcoin are also down—if not quite as sharply—and that their preferred cryptocurr­ency is cheaper to use.

“Despite the decline in price, all the exciting innovation is happening in [Bitcoin Cash],” Mike Komaransky, an adviser to the Bitcoin Cash Associatio­n, a group that promotes the use of the cryptocurr­ency, said in an email. Mr. Ver, another adviser to the group, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

There are many reasons why bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies haven’t taken off as a form of payment, including their volatility and uncertain regulatory status, which has kept many businesses from embracing them.

Bitcoin Cash is still the fourthmost valuable cryptocurr­ency by market capitaliza­tion, but its value relative to bitcoin has sagged, suggesting that inves- tors who once bet on it may have shifted back to the original. One unit of Bitcoin Cash is now worth about 8% of one bitcoin, down from 18% in early May, CoinMarket­Cap.com data shows.

For the average investor, the technical distinctio­ns between the two may not be that important. Instead, the market seems to be favoring the one with the stronger brand, according to Martin Garcia, a managing director at Genesis Global Trading Inc., a digital-currency trading firm.

“Bitcoin is expressing itself as the more dominant token,” he said.

 ?? GILLIAN FLACCUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The underperfo­rmance of Bitcoin Cash puts into question whether virtual currencies can supplant traditiona­l money.
GILLIAN FLACCUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The underperfo­rmance of Bitcoin Cash puts into question whether virtual currencies can supplant traditiona­l money.

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