A `Very High Likelihood` of Success
According to John Rainey, PayPal’s chief financial officer, Bitcoin, and other cryptocurrencies will one day become a popular method of payment – just not yet. Rainey told The Wall Street Journal:
`Given the volatility of bitcoin right now, it’s not a reliable currency for transactions because if you’re a merchant and you have a 10% profit margin, and you accept bitcoin, and the very next day bitcoin drops 15%, you are now underwater on that transaction.`
Nevertheless, Rainey recognizes Bitcoin as a legitimate currency, even if it’s not quite ready for mainstream adoption yet. Says Rainey:
`At some point there is very high likelihood. The technology, there is real merit to it. I do think, though, it will be years down the road before we see the kind of ubiquity and acceptance that make it a form of currency that is used every day.`
This is not the first time PayPal has shown support for Bitcoin and cryptocurrency. PayPal was one of the first companies to accept cryptocurrency as a currency on its platform, allowing merchants the option to be paid in Bitcoin as early as 2014/2015.
Earlier this year, PayPal CEO Dan Schulman called Bitcoin “an interesting experiment” in a Facebook Live event, while also noting that “it could change the world.” At the same time, Xapo CEO Wences Casares even went so far as to predict a future in which one single Bitcoin could be worth $1 million.
Differing Opinions
Of course, not everyone agrees with Rainey’s and Schulman’s optimistic long-term assessment of Bitcoin’s future as a currency. Earlier this week, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney claimed Bitcoin has already failed on virtually every front, stating:
`It has pretty much failed thus far on … the traditional aspects of money. It is not a store of value because it is all over the map. Nobody uses it as a medium of exchange.`
Venture capitalist and Tezos investor Tim Draper, however, recently claimed Bitcoin is “the future” of currency while claiming a large portion of the world’s currency will someday be comprised of cryptocurrencies.
http://bitcoinist.com/trends-regulation-crypto-industry-discussed-blockchain-bitcoin-conference-germany-april-4/
Seems to me that the Bank of England Governor has not been reading current business papers. Doesn't he know that a lot of countries and merchants alike are accepting Bitcoin as a medium of exchange? His statement only made him ignorant about what is new in the financial and economic markets. It is a shame considering that he is in the banking sector, yet he barely knows anything about what he is into.
While I am in agreement with the positive views on cryptos, I very well know that there is a long way to go before it will be part of the norms. The cryptos should first be improved in terms of transactions and the heavy fluctuations it suffer on a daily basis. Nonetheless, there are strong chances of it being sought after in the future.