The Borneo Post

Bitcoin tops US$10,000, marks 10-fold increase in 2017

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NEW YORK: Virtual currency bitcoin soared to an all- time high above US$10,000 yesterday on major exchanges and digital currency indexes, including the widely followed Luxembourg­based trading plat form BitStamp.

At 0600 GMT, it was quoted around US$10,115 on BitStamp, coming sharply off a high of US$10,743.61, which was a rise of more than 5 per cent on the day.

Created in 2009, bitcoin uses encryption and a blockchain database that enables the fast and anonymous transfer of funds outside of a traditiona­l centralize­d payment system.

It has increased more than 10-fold in value so far this year, posting the largest gain of all

The price rise is a continuati­on of a long-term trend which has been driven by the speculativ­e activity in Japan and also with institutio­nal investors dipping their toes into the cryptocurr­ency market. Thomas Glucksmann, Gatecoin head of marketing

asset classes, amid increased institutio­nal demand for cryptocurr­encies as financial and mainstream use has expanded.

But sceptics say it a classic speculativ­e bubble with no relation to real financial market activity or the economy, most famously JPMorgan boss Jamie Dimon who labelled it a fraud.

Bitcoin crossed US$10,000 on smaller exchanges such as the CEX.IO exchange, and the cryptocurr­ency index coinmarket­cap. com long before it hit the milestone on BitStamp.

“The price rise is a continuati­on of a long-term trend which has been driven by the speculativ­e activity in Japan and also with institutio­nal investors dipping their toes into the cryptocurr­ency market,” said Thomas Glucksmann, head of marketing at Hong Kong exchange Gatecoin.

“The recent surge is just part of that additional element of excitement amongst speculativ­e traders and a growing contingent of liquid traders that have a long-term optimistic view on this technology.”

Sol Lederer, blockchain director at US technology company LOOMIA, said this surge will help long-time bitcoiners finally feel vindicated that their currency, which had been ridiculed for years, was at last being taken seriously.

“Bitcoin’s future is still uncertain; it faces the same serious technical challenges it has for years and faces stiff competitio­n from newer, more sophistica­ted blockchain­s. But even if it were to crash, it’s apparent that bitcoin is here to stay.”

In some emerging markets, bitcoin had hit well over US$10,000 previously. In Zimbabwe, bitcoin traded at US$17,875 on Monday. Tuesday’s price in Zimbabwe was not available.

In South Korean exchanges, bitcoin was already close to US$11,000 or higher early this week.

It traded at nearly US$12,000 on Tuesday on bithumb after hitting the US$10,000 milestone on Monday.

At Coinone, it traded at near US$12,700, and it was up 10 per cent in 24 hours at US$12,792 on Korbit.

Bitcoin has been boosted as exchanges such as the CME Group Inc and the Chicago Board Options Exchange announced plans to launch futures contracts for the currency.

“I’m sure there will be a few dips over the next weeks and months as the cryptocurr­ency market is quite illiquid so there’s bound to be volatility,” Gatecoin’s Glucksmann said.

Mike Novogratz, a former macro hedge fund manager at Fortress Investment Group, said in a Reuters Investment Summit earlier this month that mainstream institutio­nal investors were about six to eight months from adopting bitcoin.

But many leading bankers, including Credit Suisse chief executive Tidjane Thiam, have expressed scepticism about bitcoin.

“From what we can identify, the only reason today to buy or sell Bitcoin is to make money, which is the very definition of speculatio­n and the very definition of a bubble,” Thiam said earlier this month. — Reuters

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