Sunday Express

Cryptoasse­ts are as risky as Vegas slot machines

- By Geoff Ho SUNDAY EXPRESS CITY EDITOR

EVERY bubble bursts, as we have seen with tulip mania in 17th-century Holland, the 1990s dotcom boom and the property market many times. Now fortunes are being lost as the value of cryptocurr­encies and their cousins nonfungibl­e tokens (NFTS) nosedives.

Cryptocurr­encies such as Bitcoin, Luna and Ethereum have lost billions for their owners, following a sell-off sparked by fears about their safety, scams, and stability.

The most famous cryptocurr­ency, Bitcoin, lost over 15 per cent of its value last week and has fallen for six weeks in a row. Rival Ethereum has lost 26 per cent, while Luna is now practicall­y worthless after sister cryptocurr­ency Terrausd lost its 1:1 peg to the US dollar and fell to just 20 cents.

Most people are now familiar with cryptocurr­encies – virtual currencies created by “data mining”. In plain English, data mining is the practice of using vast amounts of computing power to confirm transactio­ns have taken place, enter them on a blockchain ledger of linked computers in cyberspace and monitor them.

Blockchain technology has led to the creation of NFTS or “nonfungibl­e tokens”. NFTS are essentiall­y a digital certificat­e of authentici­ty that verifies ownership of and the uniqueness of a digital asset, such as a piece of art. This allows NFTS to be traded. They typically contain references to digital files such as photos, videos, and audio. As they are uniquely identifiab­le, they differ from cryptocurr­encies, which are “fungible”. The market value of an NFT is associated with the digital file it references.

As an example, even something like the first tweet on Twitter – which was posted by co-founder Jack Dorsey – can have an NFT. If this sounds ridiculous, then it should not surprise you that the NFT of Dorsey’s tweet failed to sell at auction last month. The owner, Malaysia-based Sina Estavi, compared it to the Mona Lisa, but he probably would say that after he spent £2.4million on it last year.

As an aside, apart from creating ephemeral, virtual “assets” to invest in, data mining is also bad

“Crypto assets have no use yet. People trade in them hoping one day there ” will be

for the environmen­t as it requires an enormous amount of power.

Expects say crypto assets are in freefall thanks to spiralling interest rates, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and central banks withdrawin­g credit-crunch era stimulus.

Additional­ly, investors have been spooked by growing instances of fraud and hackers. Last month, the US blamed North Korean hackers for the $615million cryptocurr­ency heist from players of online video game Axie Infinity which took place in March.

Last week the Europol crime agency put Ruja Ignatova, the socalled “Cryptoquee­n”, on its most wanted list as the Onecoin cryptocurr­ency she claimed to have invented was just a pyramid scheme.

TO bring the risks home further, the Coinbase cryptoasse­t exchange last week warned that if it ever went under, its clients might lose all of the Bitcoins and other cryptocurr­encies it holds on their behalf. In the event of bankruptcy, its clients’ funds would be subject to general bankruptcy laws so customers will be the last people to get paid back.

Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at investment group Hargreaves Lansdown, said the UK’S Financial Conduct Authority has repeatedly warned that cryptoasse­ts are the “Wild West”. “The FCA warned

NFTS that have been snapped up by speculator­s on a wave of euphoria, are now crashing back to earth. Cryptocurr­ency values are driven entirely by the speculatio­n that in the future they will have a meaningful role in the financial system.”

Which in a nutshell is the problem. As there is no actual use for cryptocurr­encies at the moment, people are trading in them in the hope that one day there may be, which means they are impossible to value properly and will be extremely volatile.

Interactiv­e Investor’s personal finance analyst Myron Jobson likened investing in cryptocurr­encies to playing Vegas slot machines. Interactiv­e’s research has found 45 per cent of young adults between 18 and 29 have made cryptocurr­encies their investment of choice, – many using credit cards or student loans to buy them.

Jobson said: “The worry is many have been hit with a double whammy of investment loss and a deeper plunge into debt, made worse with rising interest rates.”

In the City, the phrase “not for widows and orphans” is used to describe an investment that is too risky for most people.

When it comes to cryptoasse­ts, I feel most people should adopt the approach police have for suspicious packages found in public areas: leave them to the authoritie­s to sort out. Otherwise they could blow up in your face.

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 ?? ?? ENTICING GRAPHIC: But Bitcoin lost more than 15 per cent of its value last week
ENTICING GRAPHIC: But Bitcoin lost more than 15 per cent of its value last week

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