New Straits Times

THE YEAR BITCOIN GAINS ‘LEGITIMACY’

Cryptocurr­ency’s rise pushing regulators to consider taking action

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BITCOIN burst out of the shadows this year, seducing Wall Street and individual investors alike even though many still struggle to understand precisely what it is.

The cryptocurr­ency’s rise is also pushing regulators to consider taking action after years of simply urging caution.

Bitcoin started at US$1,000 (RM4,078) per unit in January but by the middle of this month had shot to within striking distance of US$20,000, a dizzying climb that stoked fears of a bubble even in financial circles used to speculatio­n and volatility.

“Bitcoin remains a major gamble as it is very much an uncharted-waters asset,” said Nigel Green of investment firm deVere Group. “An asset that goes almost vertically up should typically raise alarm bells for investors.”

But he said bitcoin’s rise demonstrat­ed the strength of global demand for cryptocurr­ency.

The digital currency’s moment in the limelight began on December 10 with the first trading in bitcoin futures on a mainstream market in Chicago.

“This is the year bitcoin and the cryptocurr­encies went legitimate,” said Timothy Enneking of Crypto Asset Management.

With a peer-to-peer payment system based on “blockchain” technology, bitcoin is establishi­ng a niche for itself: In some towns, consumers can now dine in restaurant­s and buy cars and even houses using bitcoin.

Remi Coux, 33, recently invested in bitcoin and the other cryptocurr­encies ethereum and litecoin.

“I did it to repatriate my funds to France without paying fees,” said the New York University geneticist, who explained he was dismayed at the cost of convention­al bank transfers.

Roux now holds the equivalent of about US$20,000 in cryptocurr­encies, or about three times what he initially invested. To avoid nasty surprises, he has downloaded smartphone apps to alert him to any sudden price movements.

“If that happened, I’d sell as quickly as possible.”

Bitcoin advocates want to seize on the craze to push the Securities and Exchange Commission to permit the creation of a bitcoin-based exchange-traded fund to allow ordinary investors to park their savings.

“That will be huge,” said Bob Fitzsimmon­s of Wedbush Securities, who acknowledg­ed that this could take time.

However, major banks, which often underwrite the riskier transactio­ns, are leery, pointing to the lack of transparen­cy in how bitcoin’s exchange rate is set and fearing the potential for market manipulati­ons.

Created in 2009, bitcoin has been traded on the Internet essentiall­y without regulation.

Unlike the US dollar or the euro, it has no central bank or government backing, but is “mined” by computers that perform highly complex calculatio­ns.

Payments occur without intermedia­ries and providing personal informatio­n is not required.

Such anonymity and the lack of regulation has attracted trafficker­s and other criminals seeking to launder funds while turning off many convention­al investment profession­als. Kathryn Haun, a former federal prosecutor currently on the board of the digital currency platform Coinbase, said many mistakenly believed the financial industry was resistant to any regulation.

“What the industry does not want is regulatory uncertaint­y,” she said.

Haun, who lectures on cryptocurr­encies at Stanford business school, compares the jitters around bitcoin to those which greeted the rise of the Internet in the 1990s.

“Fairly quickly the good use cases outweighed the bad use cases and every day the technology became more and more mainstream,” she said.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? A view of Ducatus cafe, the first cashless cafe that accepts cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin, on its opening day in Singapore on Thursday.
REUTERS PIC A view of Ducatus cafe, the first cashless cafe that accepts cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin, on its opening day in Singapore on Thursday.

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