The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Tesla CEO Musk pulls cryptocurr­ency U-turn

- HYUNJOO JIN SUBRAT PATNAIK

Tesla Inc. boss Elon Musk on Thursday denounced the "insane" amount of energy used to produce bitcoin, doubling down on his sudden rejection of the cryptocurr­ency as a means of payment over environmen­tal concerns.

Musk, one of bitcoin's most ardent backers, tweeted a graph of bitcoin's power consumptio­n and said: "Energy usage trend over past few months is insane."

That followed his tweet from Wednesday saying Tesla would no longer accept the cryptocurr­ency as payment for its electric cars because it came at a great cost to the environmen­t, an about face from his stance in March.

Bitcoin, which sank 17 per cent to its lowest since March 1 on Wednesday after Musk's comments, climbed back to US$50,360 on Thursday. Other cryptocurr­encies including ether also fell before regaining some ground. Coinbase, the biggest U.S. cryptocurr­ency exchange, was down two per cent.

Tesla's shares were up one per cent. Message volume related to the stock on trading-focused social media site Stocktwits spiked by a third, but sentiment on the stock weakened by seven per cent, data showed.

"Tesla and Bitcoin were always odd bedfellows, given the environmen­tal credential­s of the electric car maker, and the colossal amount of energy consumed by the cryptocurr­ency," Laith Khalaf, financial analyst at fund platform AJ Bell, said.

Some Tesla investors and environmen­tal campaigner­s have been increasing­ly critical about the way bitcoin is created or "mined." High-powered computers compete to solve complex mathematic­al puzzles in an energy-intensive process that often relies on fossil fuels, particular­ly coal.

Musk said he backed that concern, especially the use of "coal, which has the worst emissions of any fuel."

If bitcoin was a country, it would use about the same amount of electricit­y a year as Switzerlan­d does, Deutsche Bank analysts said.

"In a POST-COVID-19 world, as the focus of companies shifts back to climate concerns, bitcoin's poor environmen­tal credential­s ... will make companies and government­s unwilling to use it," said Jeff Schumacher, CEO of NAX, which helps businesses launch asset-based securities.

A big proponent of Musk's bitcoin adoption has been ARK Invest's Cathie Wood, who has argued in favour of Tesla's disruptive vision and invested in Tesla through its flagship ARK Innovation ETF.

Woods' bet on Tesla and companies like Coinbase gives Ark more indirect exposure to cryptocurr­encies.

Tesla revealed in February it had bought $1.5 billion of bitcoin, turbocharg­ing the crypto market. In April, the firm said it trimmed its position by 10 per cent in the first quarter, booking a net profit of about $100 million.

Musk said on Wednesday that Tesla would retain its bitcoin holdings with the plan to use the cryptocurr­ency as soon as mining transition­s to more sustainabl­e energy sources.

‘CARBON-FREE’

Some welcomed Musk's Uturn on bitcoin payments.

"We were surprised it took Musk so long to recognize the detrimenta­l impact of Bitcoin on the environmen­t but are happy to see the reversal of Tesla's position," said Ben Dear, CEO of Osmosis Investment Management, which holds Tesla stock.

He said the reversal will "put pressure on companies moving forward to think twice about the consequenc­es before accepting it as a form of payment," adding the volatility of bitcoin makes it commercial­ly nonviable for large-scale corporate adoption.

Ex-bank of England Governor Mark Carney applauded the decision, saying: "As with transporta­tion, we need a new payments system that is resilient, high performanc­e and carbon free."

Meltem Demirors, chief strategy officer at digital asset manager Coinshares Group, said Tesla was unlikely to have sold many, if any, cars using bitcoin, and the back flip generated positive publicity while simplifyin­g payment processes.

"Elon was getting a lot of questions and criticisms, and this statement allows him to appease critics while still keeping bitcoin on his balance sheet," Demirors said.

Musk did not say in his Twitter comments whether any vehicles had been purchased with bitcoin and Tesla did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

He reaffirmed he remained a strong believer in cryptocurr­encies and was looking at other cryptocurr­encies that use less than one per cent of bitcoin's energy.

On Tuesday, he had polled Twitter users on whether Tesla should accept dogecoin, a currency he has helped turn from a joke into a valuable commodity.

He announced on Sunday that his commercial rocket company Spacex would accept dogecoin as payment to launch a lunar mission next year, just hours after he sent the cryptocurr­ency spiraling downward when he called it "a hustle" during a guest spot on the Saturday Night Live TV show.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Elon Musk criticized bitcoin’s “insane” energy use after his Tesla car company reversed course about accepting the cryptocurr­ency for payment.
REUTERS Elon Musk criticized bitcoin’s “insane” energy use after his Tesla car company reversed course about accepting the cryptocurr­ency for payment.

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