https://www.alt-m.org/2017/10/26/blockchain-gold/=========================================
Also see:
Cyrptocurrencies aren't currencies. They have become speculative vehicles bought on credit. The growth rate of Bitcoin, or any individual "currency," is convincingly limited by the technology, but the number of "currencies" has exploded.
"All of this should make it very plain to buyers of any cryptocurrency that it’s greatest selling point, it’s limited supply, has been completely debunked and in the most preposterous way possible. In fact, the growth rate in the creation of new cryptocurrencies makes central bank money printing in recent years look utterly conservative by comparison."
The following article, of course, is now wildly out of date, having been posted about 35 days ago, but consider the arguments. The extremes have only become more extreme and the insanity more insane.
Tom
(Bold highlighting below is mine. Tom)
This is not the store of value you are looking for
Posted by Jesse Felder on 9/1/2017
[Omitting a lot of talk about Warren Buffett and Ben Gramham's thinking about bubbles]
Essentially, a bubble starts with a compelling premise and then the prices start going up and greed takes over. And I think this is exactly what is going on with Bitcoin today.It all started with a compelling premise. Out of the depths of the financial crisis a group of cyber punks came up with the idea of a decentralized, digital form of cryptocurrency with limited supply that could not be manipulated by any central authority. The idea really had its foundations a decade or so earlier but it took the financial crisis to precipitate its actual creation in early 2009. As central banks around the world began to pursue incredible amounts of money printing the premise only became that much more compelling. Then the price started to take off and greed took over.
Eight years later and Bitcoin is now worth nearly $100 billion. It has soared 20-fold to $4,800 per Bitcoin over just the past two years, since Buffett’s partner Charlie Munger called it, “rat poison.” To get a sense of just how overvalued this is, the Wall Street Journal surmised if Bitcoin took over the entire credit card transaction market, putting Visa and MasterCard out of business, it would be worth about $100. Even more egregious, the Bitcoin Investment Trust (GBTC) now trades at more than a 115% premium to the underlying value of its Bitcoin assets. Buyers here thus need Bitcoin to trade over $10,000 to begin to break even on today’s purchases.
Bitcoin is only part of the story. There are now more than 800 different cryptocurrencies with a combined market cap of $166 billion. “ICO Unicorns” are now a thing (companies whose initial coin offerings are now worth more than a billion dollars). Burger King introduced the Whopper Coin last week and Doge Coin, which was created as a joke based upon a popular internet meme, is now worth nearly a quarter billion dollars. There’s now a Dentacoin for patients to use in paying their dentists. There’s a Titcoin for porn and a Potcoin for marijuana.
All of this should make it very plain to buyers of any cryptocurrency that it’s greatest selling point, it’s limited supply, has been completely debunked and in the most preposterous way possible. In fact, the growth rate in the creation of new cryptocurrencies makes central bank money printing in recent years look utterly conservative by comparison. And all of this still ignores the fact that a bitcoin is even less tangible than a tulip bulb. There is literally nothing to it.
That hasn’t stopped investors from buying in, however. More than 50 hedge funds have been formed to take advantage of the crypto gold rush. And it’s not just high net worth, folks, either. NBC news ran a story recently carrying this headline: “Middle America Is Crazy In Love With Bitcoin.” The first line reads, “If you’re not buying Bitcoin, you’re not keeping up with the Joneses.” And when you run a google search for “buy bitcoin with” the first suggested result is “PayPal.” The second is “credit card.” Middle America now famously has no savings to speak of so they are buying Bitcoin in their credit cards.
If this doesn’t fit Mr. Buffett’s criteria of a bubble, I don’t know what does. Much of this is just your standard bubble greed but it’s interesting that the premise, the story of Bitcoin, has resonated with people so much. They are clearly buying into the proposition that central banks have gone nuts and they need something to act as a store of value amid the madness. It’s just another signpost in the anti-technocrat, anti-elitist movement. Sadly, these folks have been deceived as to the merits of their chosen store of value.
And it’s terribly ironic that the store of value they have chosen is simply a bad knock-off one that has been around for as long as humans have needed one. I am, of course, referring to gold. In fact, one of the early predecessors of Bitcoin was called Bitgold and it was essentially a digital currency that attempted to mimic gold’s virtues. Think back to the Bitcoin premise presented at the beginning of this discuss: “a decentralized, digital form of cryptocurrency with limited supply that could not be manipulated by any central authority.” The only difference between Bitcoin and gold is that the latter is not digital or encrypted; it’s tangible. Oh, and unlike cryptocurrencies it’s supply is truly limited.
It’s almost as if, in the aftermath of the financial crisis, investors went looking for gold, stared directly at it and then were somehow hypnotized into thinking, “this is not the store of value you’re looking for.” A painful bear market, like that we have witnessed in gold since 2011, can have just that sort of effect. And the most powerful bull market in history in what is plainly a digital pyramid scheme played a not insignificant role, as well.
Still, the popularity of the Bitcoin premise will eventually be very bullish for gold. When the bubble in the former bursts (which will likely coincide with a bursting of the bubbles in other risk assets), investors will realize their error and rush once again to the latter, understanding that it is the genuine article and truly fulfills the promise of a “store of value.” At that point, prices will rise and we will start to see greed at work again in the gold markets.