Las Vegas Review-Journal

Chiding, backing cryptocurr­encies

Economist, enthusiast­s clash at LV convention on emerging technology

- By Todd Prince Las Vegas Review-journal

Another week in Las Vegas brought another intense battle between a prominent economist and bitcoin enthusiast­s over the future of cryptocurr­encies.

New York University Professor Nouriel Roubini trashed cryptocurr­encies as a fad that makes no economic sense, and he called its underlying technology blockchain a “glorified spreadshee­t.”

“Bitcoin and cryptocurr­encies are the mother and father of all bubbles and a bubble that has already burst. Blockchain is probably one of the most over-hyped technologi­es ever,” Roubini told a few hundred people Tuesday at the Blockshow industry conference.

At a panel discussion that followed his remarks, cryptocurr­ency enthusiast­s dismissed the economist’s dire outlook. They predicted that the number of cryptocurr­ency users will grow to more than 1 billion and that the price will rise 10-fold.

Roubini’s pessimisti­c view coincides with that of Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, who dismissed cryptocurr­encies at the Chainxchan­ge show last week.

About six shows scheduled for this year on the Strip are dedicated to blockchain and cryptocurr­ency. The two-day Blockshow at The Venetian, which ended Tuesday, attracted about 1,000 attendees and a few dozen exhibitors.

Blockshow panelist Michael Terpin, who helps companies launch initial crypto coin offerings, compared the takeoff of digital currencies to that of the internet in the 1990s.

The number of cryptocurr­ency users will rise as people lose faith in their financial systems, especially in emerging markets, Terpin said.

Roubini specifical­ly addressed that theory in his keynote address before the panel.

“Crypto is not the new internet,’’ Roubini said. “When your new technology is truly disruptive, adoption becomes exponentia­l. The number of transactio­ns increases exponentia­lly, and transactio­n costs decrease rapidly.’’

However, that is not happening with cryptocurr­encies, he said.

They are not a store of value, a unit of accounting or a viable means of payment.

Roubini also said the generation of cryptocurr­encies via computers — a process known as “mining” — often takes place in countries without democratic regimes, like China, Russia and Belarus. “Can we really trust those guys?”

Cryptocurr­ency investor Mark Mueller-eberstein said Roubini made some legitimate points but could “not see the trees for the forest.”

Mueller-eberstein said cryptocurr­encies and blockchain will grow in usage in emerging markets, where weak institutio­ns and poor infrastruc­ture make the emerging technology useful.

He expects bitcoin to surge in value again, saying the price could reach $50,000 to $60,000 “soon.”

Bitcoin rallied from just below $1,000 in January 2017 to nearly $20,000 in December 2017 before tumbling this year.

The price of bitcoin was around $6,300 Wednesday afternoon.

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands operates The Venetian.

Contact Todd Prince at 702-3830386 or tprince@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @toddprince­tv on Twitter.

 ?? Marcus Villagran ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @brokejourn­alist Irina Liu, marketing manager of Btc.com, works at her company’s booth at the Blockshow convention Tuesday at The Venetian.
Marcus Villagran Las Vegas Review-journal @brokejourn­alist Irina Liu, marketing manager of Btc.com, works at her company’s booth at the Blockshow convention Tuesday at The Venetian.
 ??  ?? A Cryptocand­y machine on Tuesday at the Blockshow at The Venetian.
A Cryptocand­y machine on Tuesday at the Blockshow at The Venetian.

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