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Bitcoin Is the New Crisis Currency

Cory
November 20, 2017

I find it very interesting today that when we are seeing political turmoil in Zimbabwe and political unease in Germany it is Bitcoin continue to benefit and gold sell off. There is much more at play for the move down in gold but as for Bitcoin the safe-haven ability to send money easily across boarders is a very unique and defining feature. Currently it doesn’t matter that you can’t use Bitcoin to buy a coffee. Read the post below posted on Bloomberg a couple days ago for an update on how Bitcoin has benefited from political shakiness.

Click here to visit the original posting site.

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  • Cryptocurrency supplants local money when governments fail
  • Africans in Paris use it to send money home to their families

About a third of the customers queuing at La Maison du Bitcoin’s teller windows in Paris aren’t speculating on the value of the cryptocurrency. They’re sending digital money home to Africa.

“In many countries in Africa, there are far more cellphones than bank accounts,” said Manuel Valente, co-founder of La Maison. “For bitcoin, all you need is a phone.”

 

There’s no data on how much digital money leaves industrialized nations for the developing world. Part of the allure of electronic cash is the ability to transfer it anonymously. But as events in Zimbabwe have confirmed, bitcoin, the world’s most popular cryptocurrency, is most attractive when confidence in institutions falls.

‘Safe Haven’

“Bitcoin is a safe haven for people around the world who don’t trust their governments,” said Andrew Milne, chief investment officer and co-founder of Altana Digital Currency Fund, a $22 million hedge fund that invests in cryptocurrency assets. “There are many countries where people are looking for an asset that isn’t vulnerable to banks blowing themselves up.’’

Zimbabwe gave up its own currency in 2009, the same year bitcoin was born, after hyperinflation led to the printing of a 100 trillion Zimbabwean dollar note. The country uses the U.S. dollar, the South African rand and digital money.

People buy and sell bitcoins on a secure peer-to-peer network that doesn’t rely on any government or central bank.

Trying to control it is “like trying to catch water,” said Alex Tapscott, chief executive officer of NextBlock Global Ltd., a venture-capital firm that invests in startups involved in blockchain, the shared digital ledger that records transactions made with cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin Skepticism

Leaders of three of the world’s biggest banks have expressed skepticism about the stability and endurance of bitcoin. In September, JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Dimon threatened to fire any JPMorgan trader foolish enough to bet on it. Weber, who leads UBS Group AG, said last month that bitcoin has no intrinsic value because nothing backs it.

Earlier this month, Credit Suisse Group AG CEO Tidjane Thiam said that “the only reason today to buy or sell bitcoin is to make money, which is the very definition of speculation and the very definition of a bubble.”

Residents, especially, of Zimbabwe and Venezuela, where the annual accumulated inflation rate is 825 percent, might disagree.

In Africa, converting bitcoin to the local currency is often handled by local entrepreneurs, either with licensed change points similar to Paris’s La Maison du Bitcoin, or, on a smaller scale, an individual with a mobile phone and a pocket of cash, Valente said.

“It’s like a walking exchange point,” Valente said. “It’s very decentralized.”

Buying goods and services with cryptocurrency is still difficult to do, but Valente said he’s heard of shops that accept bitcoin opening in many African countries.

Entrepreneurs have started companies intended to serve bigger markets. BitPesa Ltd., a Kenya-based startup, provides international money transfers and other services in bitcoin in Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda and its own country. Unocoin does the same in India, as does Coins.PH in the Philippines.

Back in Paris, a few blocks from La Maison du Bitcoin is Passage du Grand Cerf, a covered street of shops. They all display a sticker on their windows declaring “We Accept Bitcoin.” The stores sell everything from antiques to designer clothing. Most proprietors said they’ve averaged a few transactions a month in bitcoin, frequently to Africans.

“We’ve made about 20 or more sales in bitcoin in the past year,” said Yann Robert, who runs a designer clothing store. “The buyers are usually from Africa, a few from Asia — China, Japan. And they’re very happy, because not that many stores accept bitcoin.”

Discussion
24 Comments
    Nov 20, 2017 20:09 AM

    Ya sure,you betcha.
    Bloomberg has always been go to for the Crypto’s.

    CFS
    Nov 20, 2017 20:09 AM

    Another US-centric view.?

    Nov 20, 2017 20:25 AM
    Nov 20, 2017 20:27 AM

    Now turn that chart upside down.
    https://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=GC&p=m5

    Nov 20, 2017 20:29 AM

    And you wonder why people outside the U.S are taking a second look at the Crypto”s?

      Nov 20, 2017 20:00 PM

      JohnK:

      How about, “There’s a sucker born every minute?”

        Nov 20, 2017 20:21 PM

        Bob:
        And NASA went to the moon right?

    Nov 20, 2017 20:47 AM

    I purchased some oil at 55.65. It looks like it just jumped as it switched into the January contract. My 4000 gain on xop got wiped out and I bought more at 34.23 and it is now 34.72 and now well in the green.

    b
    Nov 20, 2017 20:03 PM

    Funny, this article mentions exactly what was mentioned here yesterday.
    Teensy bit more articulate.
    But this is nothing new now, not to alot of people anyway.

    Bob sure aint gonna like it.

    If the reason people buy it is to move cash, why would the price matter?
    I suppose it could drop 50% in price before the transfer.
    Other than that, whats price matter?

      Nov 20, 2017 20:31 PM

      Yes, it is funny………….

        Nov 20, 2017 20:32 PM

        Btw……Bobby has another stock to watch at 321…..just thought I might mention it, since, we all like Bobby……oops some of us like Bobby……. 🙂

          b
          Nov 20, 2017 20:54 PM

          I respect Bob alot, hes obviously got alot of info.
          I know he has integrity too.

          b
          Nov 20, 2017 20:00 PM

          Bonterra?
          Jay Taylor was talkin about that one.
          Personally, I think the advertising does it as much as drill results etc.
          Kerr just jumped on 1 article as well.

          I went thru that 10-15 years ago, one letter writer I had would send me an email, after that he would send to the rest of his list.
          Guaranteed doubles/triples. in a few days.

          I felt it was kinda cheaten, so I cancelled the emails.
          ya I know….putz. lol

          In any case, if you watch close, its a way to go.
          So, is fishing and spending time with grandkids. lol

      Nov 20, 2017 20:13 PM

      B:

      If you want to make a lot of money in anything at all, real estate, coins, art, gold, silver, bit con, stock market, forget knowing anything about real estate, coins, art, gold, silver, bit con or the stock market. Learn to recognize the signs of a bubble about to burst. For all the guys here who think I’m stupid, find a better call than the piece I wrote on silver on 4/25/2011 where I nailed the very top in silver to the day. Bubbles are actually pretty easy to spot, all you have to do is understand herd behavior.

        Nov 20, 2017 20:57 PM

        Bobby…..I will give you 100% credit on that one……call of the silver top. That is exactly why, people should give you a little credit or a bunch of credit…………jmo

        b
        Nov 20, 2017 20:35 PM

        I dont think too many people think your stupid Bob.

        All I see is John saying he made coin on bitcoin and you saying its bubble.
        You could both be right.

        Personally, I dont think it matters if its a bubble, what matters is are people going to go to bitcoin or PMs.
        The last few years it sure looks like bitcoin, maybe price in PMs is suppressed or there is so much metal around demand can not outstrip supply.

        I have got like Rogers, I have some, not buying or selling.

    b
    Nov 20, 2017 20:52 PM

    about aug 22 2011, gold peaks.
    Silver $50.00
    bitcoin price $10-$100

    the silver bubble sure popped and hasnt come back, took 30 years to recover the last time.

    Its been over 6 years bitcoin has been the place to be, not to mention the other cryptos.
    For 6 years other than day traders (maybe), PMs look like dumb money.
    Smart money, (course goldbugs say lucky money) has been bitcoin.

    Yes, bitcoin could crash, maybe 90%?, doubt the servers could handle that but lets say 90%, from 10,000 thats 1,000, still a 10 bagger from gold/silver peak.

    People that actually use bitcoin? they could care less the price of it, as long as the reward outweighs the risk.

    When they buy it to transfer funds, it gets used pretty darn quick, so their risk is actually quite small. The reward of getting cash to a desperate family member means most people would accept that risk.

    Looks to me, bitcoin is here to stay, another crypto might replace it, the deep state might roll out the crypto everyone will use, but for now, it looks like bitcoin.

    Geez, smart phone sales must be going thru the roof in africa.

    Casey was right years ago, about moving to africa, he said the opportunities of taking western tech there etc were huge.
    He is pro bitcoin now too.

      Nov 20, 2017 20:41 PM

      Casey always struck me as a blow hard, several years ago he was telling everyone to move to Argentina, in fact if you were really smart you would buy into some development he had going on, now b say’s it’s Africa. Next stop will be Zimbabwe! DT

        b
        Nov 20, 2017 20:18 PM

        You missed something DT.
        All true of course, he said if he was a young man he would move to africa, for alot of reasons he pointed out at the time.
        He also said buy a condo? at his development in argentina.
        He invited me there all on him, 2 weeks except the plane fare, maybe to pitch the place.
        But it sounded and looked gorgeous.
        That was for the same reason Bob went to Caymans? Rogers to China,Faber to…i forget.
        But I do believe the truly smart people that had the means got the h#ll out of dodge when they saw what was coming.

        But ya, he and Morgan come across to me in the same way.

      Nov 21, 2017 21:02 AM

      Total market cap of Cryptos expected to reach 250 Billion tomorrow. That’s wild.

      http://cdn.ceo.ca/1d16muk-Capture.PNG

    Nov 20, 2017 20:41 PM

    Jeff Berwick: It’s Time to Rotate Crypto Gains Into Forgotten Gold Stocks

    Collin Kettell – Palisade Radio Nov 20, 2017

    http://palisaderadio.com/jeff-berwick-its-time-to-rotate-crypto-gains-into-forgotten-gold-stocks/

    Nov 21, 2017 21:19 AM

    Dick Tracy – This post is for you since it relates to the coming technological advances merging with humanity.

    > Most People Don’t Even Realize What’s Coming

    “The interplay between fields like nanotechnology, brain research, 3D printing, mobile networks and computing, will create realities that were previously unthinkable.” #ArtificialIntelligence

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5tn4P7IBqoQ

    Nov 23, 2017 23:05 AM

    What is the economic term? The cost to entry into Bitcoin is the price of a cellular telephone with Internet access. The cost to open an account at a banking institution depends upon the paperwork required, proof of identity, minimal amounts in checking and savings, governmental regulations, and then there is the hours the bank is and is not open, fees to transfer funds, fees for checking, credit cards, etc. The cost to transfer Bitcoin is a small fraction of the Bitcoin held given to the wallet software and/or the transfer network to the receiving wallet. Which can both be held on cellular telephones, or personal computers. At any time of the day or night. Without governmental oversight when crossing international or even intra-state borders. Banks can close at a moment’s notice and never reopen. The Internet and Bitcoin wallets are open as long as we have electricity and computers and the infrastructure.

    I am interested to see how much further Bitcoin can go with increasing personal freedom from the banking institutions and governments.