Khaleej Times

Bitcoin could break the Internet: BIS

- Edward Robinson

london — The Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s just told the cryptocurr­ency world it’s not ready for prime time — and as far as mainstream financial services go, may never be.

In a withering 24-page article released on Sunday as part of its annual economic report, the BIS said Bitcoin and its ilk suffered from “a range of shortcomin­gs” that would prevent cryptocurr­encies from ever fulfilling the lofty expectatio­ns that prompted an explosion of interest — and investment — in the would-be asset class.

The BIS, an 88-year-old institutio­n in Basel, Switzerlan­d, that serves as a central bank for other central banks, said cryptocurr­encies are too unstable, consume too much electricit­y, and are subject to too much manipulati­on and fraud to ever serve as bona fide mediums of exchange in the global economy. It cited the decentrali­sed nature of cryptocurr­encies — Bitcoin and its imitators are created, transacted, and accounted for on a distribute­d network of computers — as a fundamenta­l flaw rather than a key strength.

In one of its most poignant findings, the BIS analysed what it would take for the blockchain software underpinni­ng Bitcoin to process the digital retail transactio­ns currently handled by national payment systems. As the size of so

The quest for decentrali­sed trust has quickly become an environmen­tal disaster

Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s

many ledgers swell, the researcher­s found, it would eventually overwhelm everything from individual smartphone­s to servers.

“The associated communicat­ion volumes could bring the Internet to a halt,” the report said.

Researcher­s also said that the race by so-called Bitcoin miners to be the first to process transactio­ns eats about the same amount of electricit­y as Switzerlan­d does. “Put in the simplest terms, the quest for decentrali­sed trust has quickly become an environmen­tal disaster,” they said.

The BIS is weighing in at pivotal moment in the cryptocurr­ency story. Even as Goldman Sachs Group, the New York Stock Exchange, and other institutio­ns take steps to offer clients access to the new marketplac­e, the US Securities and Exchange Commission is cracking down on the offerings of new digital tokens, which it has found are rife with ripoffs. At the same time, cyber-attackers are hitting crypto exchanges regularly — just last week, Bitcoin nosedived after a South Korean exchange reported it was hacked. It fell 0.9 per cent to $6,438 as of 10.40am in Sydney on Monday.

The value of the cryptocurr­ency market has plunged 53 per cent this year to $280 billion, according to CoinMarket­Cap.

The BIS did say that blockchain and its so-called distribute­d ledger technology did provide some benefits for the global financial system. The software can make sending cross-border payments more efficient, for example. And trade finance, the business of exports and imports that still relies on faxes and letters of credit, was indeed ripe for the improvemen­ts offered by Blockchain-related programs.

Still, the institutio­n concluded that Bitcoin’s great breakthrou­gh, the ability of one person to send something of value to someone else with the ease of an email, is also its Achilles heel. It’s simply too risky on a number of levels to try and run the global economy on a network with no centre.

“Trust can evaporate at any time because of the fragility of the decentrali­sed consensus through which transactio­ns are recorded,” the report concluded.

 ?? — AP ?? Researcher­s said that the race by so-called Bitcoin miners to be the first to process transactio­ns eats about the same amount of electricit­y as Switzerlan­d does.
— AP Researcher­s said that the race by so-called Bitcoin miners to be the first to process transactio­ns eats about the same amount of electricit­y as Switzerlan­d does.

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