Philippine Daily Inquirer

PUBLIC WARNED AGAINST INVESTING IN BITCOINS

- By DJ Yap @deejayapIN­Q

Filipinos hoping to cash in on the bitcoin craze were warned by the chair of the House banks and financial intermedia­ries committee on Wednesday about the risks of investing in cryptocurr­ency as the price of bitcoin surged to $10,000.

Eastern Samar Rep. Ben Evardone urged Filipino investors not to part with their hard-earned money by buying bitcoins in the hope of making quick profits.

At the hearing of the committee on banks and financial intermedia­ries Tuesday, he said officials from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and the Securities and Exchange Commission, and representa­tives from the banking sector “were one in advising the public against investing in bitcoin or any other virtual currency.”

“They said it is very risky, speculativ­e and [has] no safeguards,” Evardone said.

Evardone said Filipinos might get tempted into putting all their savings and retirement funds into bitcoins and other cryptocurr­encies “without realizing that they could lose everything in one drastic plunge.”

“Cryptocurr­encies like bitcoin are a promising lowcost remittance platform for Filipino workers sending their earnings home but they are extremely risky investment­s due to lack of regulatory protection for consumers,” he said.

Bitcoins and other electronic currencies are not backed by a bank, any existing currency unit in circulatio­n, or any asset of tangible value that offer some degree of security for its buyers.

“Investors stand to lose everything overnight if exchange platforms for cryptocurr­encies shut down or when the consumer’s virtual wallet containing confidenti­al informatio­n is hacked or stolen,” Evardone said.

He cited the biggest cryptocurr­ency hacking incident in February 2014 when $460 million worth of bitcoins was lost in Japan in the infamous Mt. Gox case.

Another cryptocurr­ency, tether, was the subject of the most recent hack early this month resulting in a reported loss of $31 million, according to Evardone.

“Until enough safeguards are put in place, investors would be well-advised to heed the admonition­s of the Bangko Sentral and the Securities and Exchange Commission to put their money in safer investment­s,” he said.

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