Macau Daily Times

Elon Musk convenient­ly ignored bitcoin’s inconvenie­nt truth

- Lionel Laurent, Mdt/bloomberg

When electric carmaker Tesla Inc. said in February it would buy $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin and start accepting it as payment, billionair­e boss Elon Musk had little to say about the cryptocurr­ency’s wasteful energy consumptio­n — despite the obvious inconsiste­ncy with his firm’s green credential­s.

And when fellow Bitcoin bulls Jack Dorsey and Cathie Wood last month backed a report claiming that combining cryptocurr­ency mining and renewable-energy projects could be good for the environmen­t, Musk praised the paper as “true,” even though its optimistic and overconfid­ent assumption­s smacked of greenwashi­ng.

So while it’ s an encouragin­g developmen­t to see musk’ s latest tweet acknowledg­ing Bitcoin’s inconvenie­nt truth, namely that energy-inefficien­t mining algorithms by some measures consume more power than entire countries, the speed of his overnight conversion is a little discombobu­lating. Not least for the crypto fans hanging on Musk’s every word, who were stung by the $365 billion or so wiped off the market’s value following Musk’s decision to halt support for Bitcoin payments.

Taking the tweet at face value — which is dangerous with a Pied Piper character like Musk — suggests that the alternativ­e energy facts being pumped into the room by Bitcoiners weren’t gaining traction.

Cheap and abundant power is essential to crypto miners, with coal accounting for an estimated 38% of their supply, according to the Cambridge Center for Alternativ­e Finance. Estimates of the Bitcoin network’s total energy consumptio­n vary widely but run from 2080 terawatt hours in 2019 to more than 100 this year. Despite the efforts of celebrity backers such as Dorsey and Wood in pushing narratives about renewable mining, the laser-eye crowd never came close to debunking energy concerns.

Musk’s move may also indicate that Teslas weren’t flying off the shelves as a result of accepting Bitcoin payment. Another inconvenie­nt truth about Bitcoin is that its huge price swings and artificial­ly limited supply make it much better as a tool for speculativ­e hoarding than for buying things — which can be a taxable event. In late March a Tesla representa­tive told Coindesk it wasn’t clear if any cars had been paid for with the cryptocurr­ency. The company later disclosed it had netted $101 million in income from selling about 10% of its own Bitcoin holdings.

Tesla’s U-turn also suggests that the hype around the company’s Bitcoin support may not have been worth the questions and doubts from institutio­nal investors who are increasing­ly paying attention to environmen­tal, social and governance factors. “Can sustainabi­lity investors consider owning companies associated with crypto?” UBS economist Paul Donovan wondered in February. Musk has made the question a little easier to answer, even if he says Tesla will still keep its own Bitcoin pile.

Perhaps it isn’t a coincidenc­e that this is happening amid a broader shift in financial markets. Inflation fears and bond yields are rising and eating into optimistic moonshot investment­s. The tech-heavy Nasdaq stock index is down this week; shares of Wood’s ARK and Tesla have fallen sharply. Bitcoin is still above $50,000, but after an 8% fall in three days it’s hardly behaving like an unbeatable inflation hedge.

Musk has left just enough gas in the tank to avoid abandoning his crypto disciples completely. By leaving the door open to using tokens that are less wasteful than Bitcoin, he’s hedging his bets on the future of money — and reserved the right to keep trolling the internet as a result. On Tuesday he asked his followers whether Tesla should accept satirical Bitcoin spin-off Dogecoin, shortly after calling it a “hustle” on Saturday Night Live. Ethereum, meanwhile, aims to move away from a mining model based on computatio­nal “work” toward one powered by existing coin “stakes.” Alternativ­e models are out there.

Still, the more Musk blends payment U-turns, social-media memes and stand-up comedy, the harder it will be to detect where the future of money ends and the “hustle” begins. Which might be the whole point.

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