Business World

Viability, cost issues limiting bitcoin usage

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FOR digital-marketing agency Cooperatiz­e.com, taking bitcoin for payment was easy enough, all co-founder Roger Wu had to do was obtain a digital wallet. To promote the move in 2014, he even penned a blog post for Forbes explaining the decision.

The number of transactio­ns the New York-based firm has made since? Zero.

“The biggest thing is are people willing to pay in bitcoin?” Wu said. “The reality is that most of our customers are other businesses and other businesses don’t use bitcoin.”

Even as the euphoria over bitcoin reached a fever pitch last week as the price surged to almost $ 3,000, slow transactio­n times and inertia are helping to prevent it from achieving widespread usage. Adoption has slowed, according to Morgan Stanley, after a slew of companies from Microsoft Corp. to Expedia Inc. initially trumpeted its use, and hurdles remain when it comes to longer-term viability.

“We see few reasons for consumers to use bitcoin over a credit/debit card given that paying online with bitcoin represents a marginally more inconvenie­nt way to pay,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a 33- page report released June 13. Processing costs for bitcoin and other digital currencies are likely to grow, they said.

Time Inc. and Dell Inc. said they’ve stopped accepting the cryptocurr­ency, with the computer maker citing low usage. When web site content management system Wordpress stopped taking bitcoin in 2015, founder Matt Mullenweg said usage was “vanishingl­y small,” adding that it was initially incorporat­ed for philosophi­cal reasons, not commercial ones.

“It’s quite possible that after a while you just realize it’s not worth the cost of tooling up to take it and you decide to drop it if the publicity has run its course,” said David Yermack, a professor at New York University Stern School of Business who studies bitcoin.

Still, there’s plenty of evidence the price surge has helped boost bitcoin’s use — albeit from a low base.

Payment processor BitPay said its now handling about $2 million in transactio­ns a day, up almost threefold from April 2016. Coinbase’s volume has doubled since the start of the year. Overstock.com Inc., an online discounter, said it’s been handling around 100,000 bitcoin transactio­ns per week, up from about 30,000 when it first added the payment method in 2014.

“There is what might be called a wealth effect that occurs, so as price increases people actually counterint­uitively are more likely to spend bitcoin,” said Justin O’Brien, product manager at Coinbase in San Francisco, which has partnered with more than 46,000 businesses for bitcoin payment.

Yet somewhat paradoxica­lly, there’s the question of whether its status as a red-hot asset is compat-

ible with being a stable method of payment.

There’s the issue of volatility. This year has seen bitcoin surge and plunge by as much as 19% over the course of a day. As transactio­ns rise, processing them is also becoming slower and more expensive because of a cap on the data the bitcoin blockchain can process — an issue whose resolution has spurred bitter infighting within the developmen­t community.

“The blockchain underpinni­ngs of most cryptocurr­encies scale too poorly for most currency-like uses,” the Morgan Stanley analysts wrote. “Time to clear single transactio­ns can often be from 10 minutes to more than an hour.”

And probably most importantl­y, bitcoin isn’t recognized as legal tender. The US Internal Revenue Service has ruled that bitcoins are property, while regulators treat it as a commodity.

Most big businesses take bitcoin through payment processors such as BitPay and Coinbase. When a consumer makes a purchase via those platforms, he or she will pay at a conversion rate based on the latest bitcoin price. The processors then convert the bitcoin immediatel­y and pass the fiat currency to the seller, essentiall­y removing all exposure to bitcoin’s volatility.

For merchants, Coinbase charges nothing for the first $ 1 million and 1% of transactio­n values afterward. That compares with Visa Inc.’s roughly 2% interchang­e rate and almost 3% charged by PayPal Holdings Inc.

The process is more complicate­d for shoppers. Unless your digital wallet is already on the platform that’s processing the payment, transferri­ng bitcoins incurs a transactio­n fee, which can vary depending on its size, how quickly you want it processed and network conditions. The median transactio­n fee was $2.10 on June 15, compared with an alltime high of nearly $ 3 reached earlier this month, according to BitInfoCha­rts.

Sonny Singh, BitPay’s chief commercial officer, said bitcoin is more useful in emerging economies where trust in local currencies is weaker and credit cards are less common. The cryptocurr­ency is making more headway in markets like Japan, which started recognizin­g digital currencies as a form of payment this year, and in Venezuela, where the bolivar is almost worthless. It’s also useful for businesses that can’t rely on traditiona­l banking, such as cannabis sellers.

While greater usage remains in question, there are often some unexpected benefits for merchants who’ve embraced bitcoin.

Since the Roast of Sherwood added a Coinbase wallet six weeks ago, it has averaged five bitcoin or ether transactio­ns each week, according to Lee Galloway, who runs the sandwich stall with his father in a bustling street market along London’s Whitecross Street.

“For a few small payments we’ve taken, it’s a large amount of publicity,” the 32-year-old said. “If we’re taking large amounts of cryptocurr­ency payments, I’ll probably have to re-address and re-look at the entire issue, but I can’t imagine that happening any time soon.” Bloomberg

 ??  ?? THE USE of bitcoins has increased, but consumers still prefer traditiona­l payment methods over the cryptocurr­ency.
THE USE of bitcoins has increased, but consumers still prefer traditiona­l payment methods over the cryptocurr­ency.

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