Bitcoin’s value is driven by human emotion, not code. Thoughts?

in #cryptotrading7 years ago (edited)

In the past week, Bitcoin took a dramatic tumble after its historic 1,400pc rally. The digital currency eventually rebounded only hours later but it left Bitcoin investors reeling with fears that the bubble had finally burst.

While data scientists, software developers and financial engineers are busy at work on more complex algorithmic trading platforms to better predict – and optimise – this volatility, they may be looking in the wrong place. Software code and computer science might provide part of the answers but the rest can be found through a surprising source: the humanities.

Bitcoin, like any currency, is really just an expression of mutual trust in cultural norms and practices. It is a feat of our collective imaginations that we can all agree on our varied currency narratives. I trust that my five goats are going to be worth your five shells, for example.

Cyber currency enthusiasts continue to argue that blockchain technology obviates the need for messy and outdated conceits such as trust in institutional banking and trading clearing houses.

And yet, while Bitcoin security may be predicated on mathematics, Bitcoin value is an intrinsically social calculation. Consequently, humanities continue to be our best way of teasing out the nuances in ideas around shared cultural understandings and beliefs.

So where can we turn when we want to better understand the radically changing notions of value that exist in this new wave of crypto assets? The investor Bob Miller, of Miller Value Partners in Baltimore, is betting big on philosophy. He just made a $75m gift to the philosophy department at Johns Hopkins University, believing that a strong humanities faculty will give our society smarter thinkers.

When our shared understanding of worth undergoes a fundamental structural shift, algorithmic modelling is not going to give us any insights. Only the humanities can help us gain perspective around our changing norms, networks and social institutions.

The idea that the humanities provide some of the essential building blocks to financial and business success strikes us as radical in the midst of a preoccupation with an algorithmic understanding of the world. Yet it was not so long ago when it was commonplace for leaders in finance, media, or policy to have a background in the humanities.

For instance, Ken Chenault, former chief executive of American Express, cited his in-depth study of history as a touchstone for his leadership and managerial acumen; Carly Fiorina, president and chief executive of Hewlett Packard from 1999 to 2005, described her undergraduate major in medieval history as the perfect foundation for understanding the hi-tech world; the investor Carl Icahn’s senior thesis in philosophy at Princeton was titled, The Problem of Formulating an Adequate Explication of the Empiricist Criterion of Meaning; and Steven Schwartzman, chief executive of the private equity firm Blackstone, chose an interdisciplinary major at Yale that he described as “psychology, sociology, anthropology, and biology, which is really sort of the study of the human being”.

It used to be assumed that a better understanding of culture and shared worlds – the cyberpunk world from which Bitcoin emerged, for example – would create better investment and business decisions.

Today we rush far too quickly into an understanding based on aggregation and quantification. And yet when Bitcoin takes its investors on a wild ride, it’s a uniquely human phenomenon.

Without tapping into the human sciences, we will never really come close to understanding why it happened and what it all means.

like.share.gif

Sam Broye

Sort:  

yes, fear and greed, hope and doubt, and the battle to manage these emotions better than the other guy. If you can outsource your decisions to a program, you may have an advantage.

Exactly! The big guys have been using automated systems for a while now, emotionless, fully logical trading machines using algorithm and investor made chart patterns like those mentioned in some of my previous articles.

They're billion dollar machines and they trade millions of small winning trades per day, some as little as a 1 cent price movement. Its known as HFT (high frequency trading) and its apparently the reason for the crash in 2008, when the machines started to sell off massive amounts of random stocks during a malfunction. I'm unsure i believe that however. They're constantly manipulating markets and I think the '08 crash was just another way to shake out small investors so the whales can buy up stock cheap, thus, taking the money from the hands of the public and into the hands of the elite.

Standard procedure.

We can only win if we do what they're doing.

HODL!

That is something I talk about often. 90% of investing and trading is psychology and emotion.

It seems we are very much on the same level, i look forward to your future writing :)