Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bitcoin rally doesn’t flip critics

100% jump just shows currency’s volatility, doubters say

- LILY KATZ

Bitcoin’s rally has cryptocurr­ency bulls feeling vindicated. Not so fast, skeptics say.

The digital currency’s more than 100 percent surge over the past two months looks eerily familiar, argue the bears, pointing to November 2013, when the price quintupled in short order to top $ 1,000 for the first time. By Valentine’s Day it was worth around half that, and spent the better part of the next two years languishin­g below $ 500.

Then it exploded — jumping more than $ 1,400 in two months. At its height last week, one bitcoin could buy about 2 ounces of gold. Its champions touted the arrival of blockchain into the mainstream, the coin’s underlying technology that they say can lift the poor out of poverty and make transactio­ns more secure, inexpensiv­e and efficient.

But signs of a peak have emerged, detractors warn. On Thursday, bitcoin surged more than $ 300 to a record only to turn tail and close little changed. The $ 600 round trip was the biggest daily swing in its history. It then slumped 8 percent the next day. Bitcoin was down 1.5 percent to $ 2,255.50 in New York on Tuesday. For bears, that kind of volatility shows the asset’s unreliabil­ity as a store of value.

Other reasons bitcoin critics urge caution have to do with safety, growth, rivals and government regulation.

This month’s ransomware attacks serve as a reminder that bitcoin is still beloved by hackers and criminals because of its anonymity.

The cryptocurr­ency plunged in 2014 after Tokyobased Mt. Gox — then the largest bitcoin exchange — said it had been breached

and then filed for bankruptcy. Its value sank again in August 2016 after hackers stole about $ 69 million from Hong Kongbased Bitfinex. The exchange has since repaid its customers.

The bitcoin community has been split for more than a year on how to upgrade its blockchain. The time and fees necessary to verify transactio­ns have climbed to record highs, making it more difficult for businesses to use the currency as a means of payment.

While bitcoin executives have said that 2017 might be the year the cryptocurr­ency really starts to scale, others aren’t so sure.

Last week, more than 50 companies signed a pact to speed up transactio­ns, but ideologica­l difference­s have prevented similar agreements — like the one reached last year in Hong Kong — from actually being implemente­d. The much- touted SegWit upgrade was also released in October, but only a third of the community has embraced it. If the latest proposal fails to gain traction and the deadlock continues, digital currency users may dump bitcoin in favor of alternativ­es.

As the surge sends the cryptocurr­ency world into a frenzy, it can be easy to lose sight of the bigger picture. While bitcoin’s value has increased more than 100 percent since the beginning of the year, its slice of the pie has shrunk as its digital cousins steal some of the spotlight.

There are an estimated 700 rivals, according to Ron Quaranta, chairman of the Wall Street Blockchain Alliance.

Bitcoin dominated about half of the overall digital currency market as of Friday, down from around 85 percent in February, according to data from CoinMarket­Cap. com. Meanwhile, Ethereum’s share increased to about 20 percent. Some token fans aren’t sweating it though, as they say bitcoin’s potential demise doesn’t really matter as long as another digital currency takes hold.

The general public doesn’t

understand bitcoin, and many regulators still don’t, which makes it tough to regulate. In 2015, New York started issuing controvers­ial licenses to cryptocurr­ency companies, but only three had been issued as of mid- January, according to Coinbase, as many startups couldn’t afford the costs of applying.

In January, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority asked the public for help identifyin­g the potential risks of blockchain. Two months later, bitcoin plummeted after the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission rejected a proposal by the Winklevoss twins for a publicly traded fund based on the digital currency.

In a report last week about

blockchain in China, analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein wrote that while the technology could benefit Chinese banks, it’s unlikely to start a financial revolution.

“We believe blockchain applicatio­n is more likely to be evolutiona­ry rather than revolution­ary in developing countries like China,” the analysts said. “Aside from the conservati­ve regulatory attitudes toward financial innovation­s, the constraint of confidenti­ality and performanc­e of blockchain technology would make it best positioned to be enterprise- oriented rather than consumer- end.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Yuji Nakamura of Bloomberg News.

 ?? Bloomberg News/ AKIO KON ?? An employee at BITPoint Japan Co. in Tokyo on Thursday demonstrat­es how to use a bitcoin automated teller machine.
Bloomberg News/ AKIO KON An employee at BITPoint Japan Co. in Tokyo on Thursday demonstrat­es how to use a bitcoin automated teller machine.

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