Toronto Star

Economics will bring down bitcoin

Some say bitcoin is the new gold, but you can’t bury bitcoin in the backyard, and there are no industrial uses for it

- CHRIS TOMLINSON

Never invest in a business you do not understand.

If something appears too good to be true, it probably is.

Those are two wise and important rules to live by, and if you follow both, you’ll stay far, far away from cryptocurr­encies like bitcoin, including the new bitcoin futures market.

This is a column I’ve tried to avoid because it takes time to understand blockchain technology and how immutable, distribute­d ledgers will eventually revolution­ize commerce.

Thanks to some basic cryptograp­hy classes from my army days, I even understand how bitcoin is mined and its integrity is maintained.

Bitcoin does not, however, void the basic laws of economics. Strings of computer code will never become a true currency capable of holding value over time. And just as gravity holds us to the Earth, economics will bring bitcoin’s perceived value crashing down.

Proponents of cryptocurr­encies love the fact that no government regulates or controls them. Bitcoin exist only as pieces of computer code stored on a ledger shared by thousands of servers around the world, and it only has value because those users say it does, not because a government guarantees it.

Unlike the dollar, which the central bank can print or take off the market as economic needs require, bitcoin are released at a standard rate per week. New bitcoin are awarded to the owners of the servers that maintain the ledger and perform difficult mathematic­al calculatio­ns, a process known as bitcoin mining. The bitcoin supply is determined by an algorithm.

Anyone in the world, meanwhile, can spend real money to buy bitcoin and anonymousl­y trade it with other owners of bitcoin without anyone tracing it. That’s why bitcoin is popular among criminals, particular­ly extortioni­sts, embezzlers and money launderers.

The value of bitcoin is determined solely by how much the owner of a bitcoin wants for it and how much a buyer is willing to pay. Prices vary widely based on which exchange is used, and most transactio­ns take place in China, South Korea and Japan.

Some say bitcoin is the new gold, but you can’t bury bitcoin in the backyard, and there are no industrial uses for it. Bitcoin only exists on the shared ledger, where hackers can and have stolen it.

Others have compared bitcoin to the tulip bulb bubble of 1636. But that’s unfair, because you can store bulbs in the backyard, and if they lose financial value, you can still enjoy the flowers in the spring.

However, if a government, such as China, bans bitcoin, or everyone wakes up tomorrow and decides it is a fad, then it becomes worthless instantly.

There is no rational explanatio­n for why bitcoin traded at 6 cents in September 2010, reached $3,025 (U.S.) in June and hit $17,513 at noon last Tuesday, according to Coindesk.com. That’s a lot for something that exists solely as a mathematic­al equation in a market that no single person or institutio­n controls or regulates.

Traders also need to explain this: Why bitcoin and not one of the 800 other cryptocurr­encies that use the same technology? Why not litecoin, etherium, crypterium, titcoin or potcoin?

Human greed and ignorance are the only explanatio­ns.

Remember the late 1980s, when everyone said real estate could only go up? That led to the savings and loan crisis and the 1991 recession.

Remember the late 1990s, when everyone said dot-coms could only go up? That led to the telecoms-led recession of 2001.

Remember the late 2010s, when analysts said bitcoin would hit $100,000 in 2018? That was this week, after an unknown number of people already had $285 billion invested.

No sane person can look at bitcoin’s 1,600-per-cent price increase this year and deny that speculator­s have taken over something that was supposed to be an alternativ­e to official currencies for internatio­nal transactio­ns. The only way 15 per cent daily price gyrations happen is when investors are making huge bets and cashing in huge profits.

Some proponents believe Cboe’s decision to start trading bitcoin futures this week marks bitcoin’s entry into mainstream financial markets. The opposite it true.

The federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission regulates these markets, and Cboe, and beginning this week the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, must adhere to government oversight. Bitcoin exchanges that settle the futures contracts will also need to conform.

 ?? MICHAEL WARASKA/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Bitcoin’s value is determined solely by how much the owner of a bitcoin wants for it and how much a buyer is willing to pay, Chris Tomlinson writes.
MICHAEL WARASKA/NEW YORK TIMES Bitcoin’s value is determined solely by how much the owner of a bitcoin wants for it and how much a buyer is willing to pay, Chris Tomlinson writes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada