The Guardian (USA)

ECB says bitcoin is on ‘road to irrelevanc­e’ amid crypto collapse

- Alex Hern UK technology editor

The European Central Bank says bitcoin is on an “artificial­ly induced last gasp before the road to irrelevanc­e”, in a scathing interventi­on arguing against giving regulatory legitimacy to the cryptocurr­ency.

In a strongly worded blogpost, senior European Central Bank (ECB) staffers Ulrich Bindseil and Jürgen Schaaf criticised bitcoin for being a hotbed of illegal transactio­ns that brings reputation­al risk for any bank that gets involved with the sector.

The value of the digital currency has plummeted from a peak of almost $70,000 to a low of $16,000 since the collapse of the crypto exchange FTX, before stabilisin­g at about $20,000. But the ECB authors say even this stabilisat­ion is likely to be false, an artefact of market manipulati­on rather than genuine demand.

“Big bitcoin investors have the strongest incentives to keep the euphoria going,” they wrote. “The manipulati­ons by individual exchanges or stablecoin providers etc. during the first waves are well documented, but less so the stabilisin­g factors after the supposed bursting of the bubble in spring.”

In the article, which was first published as an opinion piece in the German newspaper Handelsbla­tt, Bindseil and Schaaf argue that the speculativ­e bubble in bitcoin value led to an explosion in lobbying from the cryptocurr­ency sector that aimed to treat crypto as “just another asset class”. In fact, they write, “the risks of crypto assets are undisputed among regulators”.

“Since bitcoin appears to be neither suitable as a payment system nor as a form of investment, it should be treated as neither in regulatory terms and thus should not be legitimise­d,” the blogpost concludes.

The interventi­on sparked immediate pushback from those inside the bitcoin community. Investor Eric Voorhees said that the line declaring the currency “artificial­ly inflated” would be “set in a beautiful typeface, ornately displayed on heavy matte paper, and hung elegantly upon my wall”, while venture capitalist Mike Dudas contrasted the post with a chart showing the euro’s 20% decline against the dollar since 2021, arguing that it was the euro that was on the road to “irrelevanc­e”. (In the same period, bitcoin has fallen against the euro by more than 60%).

It is one of the strongest interventi­ons yet against bitcoin, and by extension the wider cryptocurr­ency sector, by a leading regulator. After

FTX’s spectacula­r failure, authoritie­s around the world have questioned whether light-touch regulation of the cryptocurr­ency sector could be causing real harm to consumers. Inside the EU, the Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation (MiCA) is one attempt to impose stricter requiremen­ts on the sector. The rules, which are likely to be voted into law in February, will impose new consumer protection requiremen­ts on EUbased crypto companies.

The Bank of England’s deputy governor, Sir Jon Cunliffe, on Monday called for regulation, in softer terms than the ECB, telling an audience at Warwick Business School: “We should not wait until it is large and connected to develop the regulatory frameworks necessary to prevent a crypto shock that could have a much greater destabilis­ing impact.”

But the bank is hindered in its ability to take action by the prime minister’s strong backing of crypto. When he was chancellor in April 2021, Rishi Sunak launched a taskforce to examine the potential of a digital pound, and a year later he asked the Royal Mint to create the government’s first NFT. That token has still not been sold to the public, although the overall size of the crypto market has fallen by about 70% since Sunak issued the order.

 ?? FTX. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? The value of the virtual currency has plummeted from a peak of almost $70,000 to a low of $16,000 since the collapse of crypto exchange
FTX. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters The value of the virtual currency has plummeted from a peak of almost $70,000 to a low of $16,000 since the collapse of crypto exchange

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