Bitcoin: Why it is so hyped?

in #fintech2 years ago

Had you spent $27 on Bitcoin when it was created by Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009 your investment would now be worth over $37,000,000.

Widely regarded as the greatest investment vehicle of all time, Bitcoin has seen a meteoric rise during 2017 going from $777 all the way to $17,000.

Creating millionaires out of opportunistic investors and leaving financial institutions open-mouthed, Bitcoin has answered its critics at every milestone this year and some believe this is just the beginning.

The launch of Bitcoin futures on December 10th, which for the first time will allow investors to enter the Bitcoin market through a major regulated US exchange, implies that we are just getting started.

What makes Bitcoin so valuable is that there is a finite amount in existence. There will only ever be a maximum of 21 million Bitcoins and unlike normal fiat currencies you can't just print more of them whenever you feel like. This is because Bitcoin runs on a proof of work protocol: in order to create it, you have to mine it using computer processing power to solve complex algorithms on the Bitcoin blockchain. Once this is achieved, you are rewarded with Bitcoin as payment for the "work" you have done. Unfortunately the reward you get for mining has decreased drastically almost every year since Bitcoin's inception, which means that for most people the only viable way to get Bitcoin is buying it on an exchange. At the current price levels is that a risk worth taking?

Many believe Bitcoin is simply a bubble. I spoke to cryptocurrency expert and long term investor Duke Randal who thinks the asset is overvalued, "I would compare this to many supply and demand bubbles over history such as Dutch Tulip Mania and the dot com bubble of the late 90s. Prices are purely speculation based, and when you look at Bitcoin's functionality as an actual currency it is almost embarrassing." For those who don't know, the dot com bubble was a period between 1997-2001 where many internet companies were founded and given outrageously optimistic valuations based purely on speculation that later plummeted 80-90% as the bubble began to collapse in the early 2000s. Some companies such as eBay and Amazon, recovered and now sit far above those valuations but for others it was the end of the line.

Bitcoin was originally created in order to take power away from our financial systems and put people in control of their own money, cutting out the middle man and enabling peer to peer transactions. However, it is now one of the slowest cryptocurrencies on the market, its transaction speed is four times slower than the fifth biggest cryptocurrency and its nearest competitor for payment solutions Litecoin. Untraceable privacy coin Monero makes transactions even quicker, boasting an average block time of just two minutes, a fifth of the time Bitcoin can do it in, and that's without anonymity. The world's second biggest cryptocurrency, Ethereum, already has a higher transaction volume than Bitcoin despite being valued at only $676 dollars per Ether compared to Bitcoin's $16,726 per Bitcoin.

So why is Bitcoin's value so high? I asked Duke Randal the same question. "It all goes back to the same supply and demand economics, relatively there is not very much Bitcoin available and its recent surge in price has attracted a lot of media attention, this combined with the launch of Bitcoin futures which many see as the first sign Bitcoin is being accepted by the mass market, has resulted in a lot of people jumping on the bandwagon for financial gain. Like any asset, when there is a higher demand to buy than to sell, the price goes up. This is bad because these new investors are entering the market without understanding blockchain and the underlying principles of these currencies meaning they are likely to get burnt".

Another reason is that Bitcoin is extremely volatile, it has been known to swing up or down thousands of dollars in less than a minute which if you are not used to nor expecting it, causes less experienced investors to panic sell, resulting in a loss. This is yet another reason Bitcoin will struggle to be adopted as a form of payment. The Bitcoin price can move substantially between the time vendors accept Bitcoin from customers and sell it on to exchanges for their local currency. This erratic movement can wipe out their entire profitability. Will this instability go away any time soon? Not likely: Bitcoin is a relatively new asset class and although awareness is increasing, only a very small percentage of the world's population hold Bitcoin. Until it becomes more widely distributed and its liquidity improves significantly, the volatility will continue.

So if Bitcoin is pretty useless as an actual currency, what are its applications? Many believe Bitcoin has moved on from being a viable form of payment to becoming a store of value. Bitcoin is like "digital gold" and will simply be used as a benchmark for other cryptocurrencies and blockchain projects to be measured against and traded for. Recently there have been stories of people in high inflation countries such as Zimbabwe buying Bitcoin in order to hold on to what wealth they have rather than see its value decline under the recklessness of its central banking system.

Is it too late to get involved in Bitcoin? If you believe in what these cryptocurrencies will do for the world then it is never too late to get involved, but with the cost of Bitcoin being so high is it a boat for some which has already sailed. You might be better off having a look at Litecoin, up 6908% for the year or Ethereum which is up an incredible 7521% for the year. These newer, faster currencies hope to achieve what Bitcoin first set out to do back in its inception in 2009 and replace government run fiat currencies.

Who knows what the price of these currencies will be ten, fifteen or even twenty years from now? One thing is certain though, we better strap ourselves in as it is going to be a wild ride.