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Earlier this week, Jim Rickards commented in passing that Bitcoin, gold, and USD are all forms of currency. None has a coupon; none is an investment. A pyramid scheme refers to a fraudulent investment scheme. So it doesn't apply to bitcoin.
Beyond that, the whole notion of currency as a store of value is nonsense. If currency had intrinsic value, it would be barter, not cash. Krugman's position -- that the dollar is a store of value because the US Government has lots of guns -- speaks to the government's ability to enforce USD as a medium of exchange world-wide, but says nothing about store of value. Back when USD could be exchanged for gold,
you might have had an arbitrage opportunity, depending on where the face value deviates from the market value, but trading dollars for gold,
even then, was a matter of trading one currency for another. (Now, where's my Nobel prize, dadgumit.)
Marks, an investment adviser, doesn't feel bitcoin is a good investment. He's right, by definition. It is possible though (I'm told) to make a living speculating in currencies (Soros did well for himself eh). Options:*
1. Try to identify, and exploit inefficiencies in the marketplace. In other words, buy the dips. Good luck with that; if that's your strategy, seems to me like now is the time to sell (for the reasons Marks details.)
2. Run an exchange (probably the best option).
3. Bank on the real purchasing power of BTC as opposed to say USD at some point in the future. In other words, how much stuff will I be able to buy with 1BTC a year from now (if anything), compared with what I'll be able to buy with $2600.
The latter strategy, which is probably what most of us are banking on, isn't precisely an inflation hedge. Inflation only looks at one side of the equation, namely the supply of money. Money, like everything else, is governed by the laws of supply and demand. What keeps USD afloat is the almost insatiable demand that comes with being the world's reserve currency.
If you're hedging against the possibility that the USD falls from that lofty perch, you might should be stocking up on canned peaches and toilet paper, rather than BTC. Otherwise, the real question is, what's the emerging demand for BTC. And that's kind of hard to tell.
For example, what explains the recent surge in BTC/USD? Is it just a "better fool" contest? Or is demand surging? There have been two events in recent months that could drive demand.
- India's war on cash
- Hot money coming out of China, evidently spurred by worries about devaluation, seeking to dodge capital controls (check the article on real estate values in Seattle, earlier this week on ZH)
OTOH, a couple of recent busts on the dark side show just how transparent the blockchain really is. That should decrease demand. I don't think people care about "store of value" as much as liquidity. But, I think most of our customers care a great deal about confidentiality.
I don't think now is a great time to trade USD for BTC. If I held Yuan I might feel differently. But in the long run? I don't think we are anywhere close to seeing what the demand for this kind of liquidity will prove to be over the coming years.
It's OK to disagree, of course. What do I know. But a pyramid scheme? Cmon. It's not so much that Marks is a dinosaur, or an economic illiterate. He's just a troll.
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*Mining offers some arbitrage opportunities, but that's off topic