Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Jewelry store chain now accepting bitcoin

- Sarah Hauer

If you have some bitcoin burning a hole in your digital wallet, consider buying some real gold.

Milwaukee-area chain The Jewelry Center is now accepting the cryptocurr­ency bitcoin.

The Jewelry Center announced Thursday it would accept bitcoin, and the company is anxiously waiting for its first cryptocurr­ency purchase.

“I told all the salespeopl­e to get a picture,” said Joe Kelnhofer, The Jewelry Center’s digital marketing director.

Customers will be able to pay for jewelry and services at the stores in bitcoin. The purchase price will be converted from dollars to bitcoin using the current exchange rate.

Managers at the stores have the mobile app BitPay on their phones connected to an account for the jeweler to process the transactio­ns.

Bitcoin, and other cryptocurr­encies, are digital assets that move through the internet in a similar way to cash. The digital money trades in peer-to-peer transactio­ns without a third party.

One main critique of cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin has been their conversion into physical goods. Many people are still wary of using the unregulate­d currency that does not have the backing of a government, central bank or physical gold.

“If anything, it’s a fun marketing campaign,” Kelnhofer said.

The Jewelry Center sells engagement and wedding rings along with other jewelry such as pendants and earrings. It also provides services including watch repair and custom engraving. The Jewelry Center has three stores, in Greenfield, Brookfield and Burlington.

Given the volatile cryptocurr­ency market, Kelnhofer said the shop will be conservati­vely holding its bitcoin. Kelnhofer said The Jewelry Center intends to start accepting other cryptocurr­encies throughout 2018. The company is not charging an additional fee to process purchases in bitcoin. It will add charges such as sales tax onto the price before the conversion into bitcoin.

Bitcoin’s value dipped Friday to below $8,000 for the first time in 11 weeks in the midst of a broader cryptocurr­ency sell-off.

Notably, J.P. Morgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon called bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency, a “fraud” and told CNBC that he thought it would eventually “blow up.”

Meanwhile, Berkshire Hathaway Chief Executive Warren Buffett told CNBC last month that cryptocurr­encies were likely to “come to a bad ending.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States