Waterloo Region Record

The new barbarians at the banking gate

Digital cash is booming but will it change the world financial system?

- Enda Curran, Piotr Skolimowsk­i and Craig Torres

When the cryptocurr­ency Exio Coin starts a round of fundraisin­g this month, its founders say the unit will come with a unique distinctio­n: the first to be endorsed by a sovereign nation.

The identity of the government backer won’t be revealed until October, and Bloomberg News has no way of verifying the claim of support. According to co-founder Sunny Johnson, though, the supporter is one of “the world’s richest countries.”

The claim of official approval highlights how the boom in cryptocurr­encies and their underlying technology is becoming too big for central banks — long the guardian of official money — to ignore.

From speculativ­e betting to trading solar power, digital money is proliferat­ing.

Until recently, officials at major central banks were happy to watch as pioneers in the field progressed by trial and error, safe in the knowledge that it was dwarfed by roughly $5 trillion circulatin­g daily in convention­al currency markets.

But now as officials turn an eye toward the increasing­ly pervasive technology, the risk is that they’re reacting too late to both the pitfalls and the opportunit­ies presented by digital coinage.

“Central banks cannot afford to treat cyber currencies as toys to play with in a sand box,” said Andrew Sheng, chief adviser to the China Banking Regulatory Commission and distinguis­hed fellow of the Asia Global Institute, University of Hong Kong.

“It is time to realize that they are the real barbarians at the gate.”

Bitcoin — the largest and best-known digital currency — and its peers pose a threat to the establishe­d money system by effectivel­y circumvent­ing it.

Money as we know it depends on the authority of the state for credibilit­y, with central banks typically managing its price and/or quantity.

Cryptocurr­encies skirt all that and instead rely on their supposedly unhackable technology to guarantee value.

If they don’t get a handle on bitcoin and their ilk, central banks could see an erosion of their control over the money supply. The solution may be in the adage: If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.

The People’s Bank of China has done trial runs of its prototype cryptocurr­ency, taking it a step closer to being the first major central bank to issue digital money. The Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank have launched a joint research project that studies the possible use of distribute­d ledger — the technology that underpins cryptocurr­encies.

The Dutch central bank has created its own cryptocurr­ency — for internal circulatio­n only — to better understand it.

And Ben Bernanke, the former chair of the Federal Reserve who has said digital currencies show “long-term promise,” will be the keynote speaker at a blockchain and banking conference in October hosted by Ripple, the start-up behind the fourth largest digital currency.

Russia, too, has shown interest in ethereum, the second-largest digital currency, with the central bank deploying a blockchain pilot program.

In the U.S., both banks and regulators are studying distribute­d ledger technology and Fed officials have made a couple of formal speeches on the topic in the past 12 months, but have voiced reservatio­ns about digital currencies themselves.

Fed governor Jerome Powell said in March there were “significan­t policy issues” concerning them that needed further study, including vulnerabil­ity to cyberattac­k, privacy and counterfei­ting.

He also cautioned that a central bank digital currency could stifle innovation­s to improve the existing payments system.

At the same time, central bankers are obviously wary of the risks posed by alternativ­e currencies — including financial instabilit­y and fraud.

One example: The Tokyo-based Mt. Gox exchange collapsed spectacula­rly in 2014 after disclosing that it lost hundreds of millions of dollars worth of bitcoin.

But for all their theoretica­l tinkering, official-money guardians have largely stood by as digital currencies have taken off.

The explosion in initial coin offerings, or ICOs, is evidence. Investors have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the digital currency market this year alone.

Waterloo-based Kik Interactiv­e plans to raise $125 million by issuing its own cryptocurr­ency called Kin.

The dollar value of the 20 biggest cryptocurr­encies is around $150 billion, according to data from Coinmarket­cap.com. Bitcoin itself has soared more than 380 per cent this year and hit a record — but it’s also prone to wild swings, like a 50 per cent slump at the end of 2013.

“At a global level, there is an urgent need for regulatory clarity given the growth of the market,” said Daniel Heller, visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

Rather than trying to regulate the world of virtual currencies, central banks are mainly warning of risks and attempting to garner some advantage from distribute­dledger technology for their own purposes, like upgrading payments systems.

Carl-Ludwig Thiele, a board member of Germany’s Bundesbank, has described bitcoin as a “niche phenomenon” but blockchain as far more interestin­g, if it can be adapted for central-bank use. In July, Austria’s Ewald Nowotny said the he’s open to new technologi­es but doesn’t believe that will lead to a new currency, and that dealing in bitcoin is effectivel­y “gambling.”

European Central Bank governing council member Jan Smets said in December that a central-bank digital currency could give policy-makers more leeway when interest rates are negative.

Policy-makers have long been concerned that if they cut rates too low, people will simply hoard cash.

Other central banks worry about the abuses virtual money can be put to outside the official system — like criminal money laundering and the sale of illegal goods. That’s not to mention the risk that virtual currencies could pose to the rest of the financial system if the bubble were to pop.

Bank of England governor Mark Carney — who has said blockchain shows “great promise” — also warned regulators this year to keep on top of developmen­ts in financial technology if they want to avoid a 2008-style crisis.

While Mt. Gox cast a shadow over bitcoin in Japan, it now has many supporters in the world’s third-biggest economy.

Parliament passed a law in April making it a legal method of payment.

Japan’s largest banks have invested in bitcoin exchanges and small-cap stocks linked to the cryptocurr­ency or its underlying technology have rallied this year as it begins to win favour with some retailers.

With the nation’s Financial Services Agency responsibl­e for bitcoin’s regulation, the BOJ remains focussed on studying its distribute­d ledger technology.

“Central banks are not yet ready for regulating digital currencies,” said Xiao Geng, a professor of finance and public policy at the University of Hong Kong.

“But they have to in the future since unregulate­d digital currencies are prone to crime and Ponzi-type speculatio­n.”

To be sure, the attraction of virtual currencies for many remains speculatio­n, rather than for households or companies buying and selling goods.

“It is a fad that will die down and it will be used by less than one per cent of consumers and accepted by even fewer merchants,” said Sumit Agarwal of Georgetown University, who was previously a senior financial economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. “Even if we can make the digital currency safe it has many hurdles.”

But the founders of Exio Coin argue they have developed a middle way with principles of governance that will set the trend for the blockchain industry.

 ?? BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO ?? Bitcoin is the largest and best-known digital currency. The so-called cryptocurr­encies pose a threat to the establishe­d money system by effectivel­y circumvent­ing it.
BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO Bitcoin is the largest and best-known digital currency. The so-called cryptocurr­encies pose a threat to the establishe­d money system by effectivel­y circumvent­ing it.

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