Los Angeles Times

Bank takes a scathing look ‘beyond the hype’ of bitcoin

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page, or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

As if bitcoin fans didn’t have enough to worry about these days, a widely respected internatio­nal bank has just published a scathing analysis of the cryptocurr­ency questionin­g whether it ever will be more than a fad — and a costly fad for its adherents.

The report by the Swissbased Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s doesn’t present any particular­ly novel questions about bitcoin and related virtual currencies. But it brings together all the existing questions and validates them, with facts and figures.

The BIS says its goal was to look “beyond the hype” of bitcoin. What it found was a currency-like system that can’t handle a scaling up of transactio­ns, can’t provide the trustworth­iness required for a functionin­g currency, and requires so much computing power to keep track of exchanges that it already has become “an environmen­tal disaster.”

That’s just for starters. The BIS report, which is a chapter in the institutio­n’s annual report, comes against a backdrop that includes a six-month price collapse, government enforcemen­t actions against alleged cryptocurr­ency frauds and reports of hackings costing bitcoin owners the equivalent of tens of millions of dollars in the blink of an eye.

You can expect the bitcoin faithful to dismiss the BIS report as the incumbent central banking establishm­ent trying to bring down a challenge to its primacy. It’s true that the bank is part of that establishm­ent. Often described as the central bank for central banks, the BIS acts as a counterpar­ty and agent for central banks in their transactio­ns. But its duties also include policy analysis and research of interest to those member banks; producing an inaccurate or unfair analysis of a rival marketplac­e wouldn’t be much of a service for those members.

The BIS report includes a precis on the definition and role of money — worth a read by bitcoin fans and skeptics alike. As it observes, a functionin­g monetary system must comprise three features — a “unit of account” that allows price comparison­s for goods and services, a medium of exchange accepted as payment by buyers and sellers alike, and a store of value that remains stable over time — the money in your bank account, wallet or mattress shouldn’t fluctuate widely.

No such systems are perfect, the BIS acknowledg­es. Indeed, the British Museum devotes a whole room to the stones, shells, coins, paper and other objects that once served all those three roles and fell out of favor. Nor is government­issued currency immune from abuse, as is plain from the experience­s of the Weimar-era German mark and today’s debasement of the currency of Venezuela. But the central bank systems that sprung up in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and were refined in the aftermath of the Great Depression were responses to such crises.

Bitcoin and other such instrument­s aspire to the three roles of money, but can’t deliver, the BIS says. Although the systems ostensibly incorporat­e safeguards against counterfei­ting, no central authority stands behind them as a trusted counterpar­ty. Nor do they have intrinsic value. “This makes them akin to a commodity money” like gold or rice or South Sea stones, the BIS says. “Their value derives only from the expectatio­n that they will continue to be accepted by others.”

Among the more damning findings of the BIS paper is the cost of injecting trust into the bitcoin system by vesting control of the bitcoin supply in the hands of “miners.” These are people or groups that use computers to verify and validate transactio­ns via algorithms that, once solved, produce additional bitcoin supply for the miners (up to a hard limit of 21 million bitcoins).

That system is unsustaina­ble, the BIS says. The electrical use devoted to mining bitcoin alone already equals that of Switzerlan­d: “The quest for decentrali­zed trust has quickly become an environmen­tal disaster.”

There are other grounds to doubt whether bitcoin can grow large enough to serve financial transactio­ns on anything like a global scale. For bitcoin to verify transactio­ns on the scale of Visa or Mastercard systems today would require supercompu­ters and “communicat­ion volumes [that] could bring the internet to a halt.”

Then there’s the vulnerabil­ity of cryptocurr­encies to manipulati­on by miners, software errors or hackers.

The BIS acknowledg­es that some technologi­sts believe that the technology underlying bitcoin, known as blockchain technology, could have more value for central banks or internatio­nal financial systems than bitcoin itself. It’s skeptical. Tests by some central banks have experiment­ed with such systems, successful­ly. “However,” it finds, “the results have not been clearly superior to existing infrastruc­tures.”

The BIS report in itself may not shake the faith of the bitcoin faithful, whose commitment to the currency often rests in an antigovern­ment ideology. Bitcoin remains hugely volatile — its price in dollars gained 4% on Monday, according to the Coindesk service, though at about $6,700 it has lost about two-thirds of its peak of nearly $20,000 in mid-December.

The BIS has done a service for finance profession­als in providing a baseline judgment of whether bitcoin is worth serious considerat­ion as an asset class at a time when investment banks such as Goldman Sachs are offering clients access to the market. The banks appear to be responding to their clients’ wishes. But whether they’re actually providing those clients with a worthwhile service is a different question, and the BIS suggests the answer may be no.

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