The Borneo Post

Think bitcoin’s getting expensive? Try Zimbabwe

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HARARE: For most investors around the world, bitcoin is a volatile and highly speculativ­e bet. For Zimbabwean­s, however, the cryptocurr­ency seems to offer rare protection from the onset of hyperinfla­tion and financial implosion.

Some are turning to bitcoin out of desperatio­n as their bank deposits lose value almost by the day, while others are using the online currency for housekeepi­ng such as funding family members studying abroad.

The result is startling. Bitcoin’s global surge to a record high of US$7,888 last week – a sevenfold increase since the start of the year – has been spectacula­r enough. But on Harare’s bitcoin exchange, Golix, the price hit US$13,900, a 40-fold jump in the same period.

Warnings a bound internatio­nally that bitcoin may be a bubble waiting to burst. But the dire state of the Zimbabwean financial system under President Robert Mugabe is encouragin­g risk-taking.

“I have now changed all my reserves to bitcoin because that is the only way I can protect my investment,” said Arnold Manhizwa, who works for an IT and telecoms company in Harare.

The government adopted the US dollar in 2009 after a bout of hyperinfla­tion rendered the Zimbabwean dollar worthless, wiping out savings in the now defunct national currency.

After a period of relative stability, acute shortages of dollar cash have set in, leaving Zimbabwean­s with electronic units in their bank accounts which are officially called dollars but have a far lower – and rapidly decreasing – value.

In January if they wanted to buy US$ 100 in cash they had to transfer US$120 out of their account to a seller on the parallel market. Now the price is US$180 in what are nicknamed “zollars”.

Nearly all domestic transactio­ns are made via debit card or transfers using mobile phones. But some economists estimate inflation is more than 50 percent a month in zollar terms, far from the official, dollar-calculated rate of 0.38 per cent.

Zimbabwean­s are therefore piling into anything they think might retain value. Prices of cars, real estate and stocks have all soared, with the Harare bourse’s main industrial index doubling in the last two months.

For people like Manhizwa, a 34-year-old father of two, bitcoin is almost a safe-haven asset. “If I have 500 in the bank I won’t get it back and I will be losing value, but when I have my bitcoin it is going up every day,” he told Reuters.

Manhizwa, who participat­es in online chatrooms discussing cryptocurr­encies, says he deposited US$20 in bitcoin for his newly-born daughter a few months ago. Now it’s worth over US$200. “If I put that money in a bank right now in Zimbabwe I will be left with nothing,” he said.

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