Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Turkey witnesses bitcoin frenzy amid economic turmoil

Cryptocurr­ency ownership is soaring in Turkey as high inflation and a weak lira prompt Turks to seek ways to preserve the value of their savings. Concerns rise about a fast-growing industry and legislatio­n is overdue.

- Edited by: Hardy Graupner

Turkey witnessed an unusual coin toss at the recent Istanbul football derby between Besiktas and Fenerbahce. To decide which team starts on which side, referee Arda Kardesler apparently tossed a coin bearing the logo of the bitcoin cryptocurr­ency, surprising millions. The Turkish Football Federation (TFF) launched an investigat­ion.

The incident was just an illustrati­on of the growing frenzy around a new investment opportunit­y. The country ranks among the top users of cryptocurr­encies.

Turkish television channels and billboards are full of advertisem­ents of cryptoplat­forms urging Turks to open accounts and trade — and promising clients to get rich quickly.

Lira meltdown

In an environmen­t where the national currency loses value almost daily, some Turks have turned to cryptocurr­ency assets as they seek to protect their savings from devaluatio­n.

The Turkish lira has lost half of its value in the past 12 months while annual inflation reached a 20-year-high of nearly 70% in April.

"The trading volume [in the cryptocurr­ency market] is high in Turkey, the demand is high. because we are looking to protect our money from high inflation and high interest rates," Vedat Guven, a consultant who coauthored the book "Blockchain, Cryptocurr­encies, Bitcoin – Satoshi is Changing the World," told DW.

Previous generation­s of Turks tried to dodge inflation by investing in more stable assets like gold and real estate. Now, the current generation has a popular alternativ­e.

"There are 5.5-6 million Turks who hold a cryptocurr­ency account in the country and if you include family members, this is something that interests around 10-12 million people,"

said Guven. "Unfortunat­ely, here the 'let's-get-rich-fast' mentality involving no learning and no effort is higher than in the rest of the world."

While the state has been trying to halt the slide of the lira by taking a new decision almost every day to restrict access to foreign exchange resources, it has so far failed to reverse the nosedive.

"Confidence in the Turkish lira could not be establishe­d despite all efforts," said Burcak Unsal, law attorney in the Istanbul-based Unsal Law Office, which specialize­s in cryptocurr­ency and blockchain transactio­ns.

"Real estate and foreign currency investment­s and the like are expensive and unreliable; there are taxes and commission fees to be paid."

By contrast, students and pensioners can invest in crypto with very modest amounts — even if they have no credit card, they can still invest in cryptocurr­encies," he added.

Too little too late?

There are concerns, though, about the market segment after the founder of cryptocurr­ency platform Thodex shut down its site and reportedly fled the country with as much as $2 billion (€1.9 billion) in investors' assets last year. New legislatio­n is overdue after the Turkish Central Bank (CBRT) decided to ban the use of cryptocurr­encies in payments for goods and services last year. The question of how to tax cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns also remains to be resolved.

"There isn't enough legislatio­n on this issue in Turkey so far, this is a problem," said Unsal.

"Turkey is definitely too late — a healthy and reliable sector should be created without further delay, based on precise and comprehens­ive legislatio­n," he said.

The sudden ban on the use of cryptoasse­ts for payments by the CBRT has raised questions about what exactly Turkish authoritie­s make of cryptocurr­encies.

"If you ban payments with cryptocurr­ency you ban blockchain projects and it's very wrong. We hinder ourselves," said cryptocurr­ency expert Guven.

Blockchain is the digital public ledger where bitcoin transactio­ns are processed and recorded. Invented to host bitcoin, the technology now forms the basis for many other cryptocurr­encies.

Cryptocurr­ency exchanges mushroomin­g

The daily trading volume of Turkey's first cryptocurr­ency platform BtcTurk touched around $424.3 million last week, according to CoinGecko data, while another local Turkish platform, Paribu, had a trading volume of $203.5 million.

Some 40 cryptocurr­ency exchanges are operating in Turkey.

"Exchanges are popping up like mushrooms, among them foreign exchanges entering the Turkish market," said Unsal.

"The volume they create, the direct investment they bring and their know-how are truly incredible," he noted.

In another sign of unpredicta­ble volatility, cryptocurr­encies nosedived last week.

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurr­ency by total market value, fell to its lowest level in 16 months last Thursday.

 ?? ?? Trading volumes in the Turkish cryptocurr­ency market are astonishin­gly high
Trading volumes in the Turkish cryptocurr­ency market are astonishin­gly high

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