And what do you think?
Well he's not wrong.
Well, maybe a
little wrong.
Bitcoin has very little intrinsic value. It does cost resources to produce.
Both are true with gold as well. Gold's intrinsic value is what it could be used for if it wasn't desired for it's monetary value, and as a jewlry doesn't count. Gold does have industrial uses that are ignored because it's monetary value prices it out of that market, but if it no longer had any monetary value, it'd be fair to say that gold wouldn't be significantly more valuable to industry than lead is. I wouldn't think that knowning that the intrinsic value of the stuff you're investing in is about one-thousanth of what it's current market value is would sound to many of his listeners as an acceptable bottom.
What Peter means when he says that bitcoins (the currency) has no intrinsic value, he really means that it has no non-monetary use. In this sense, he is correct. Bitcoin has no non-monetary use. However, Bitcoin (the system/netwrok) does have features/characteristics that have usefulness beyond the context of a simple means of exchange, and all of those features require the use of bitcoins (the currency) to utilize. In this sense, Bitcoin does have an 'intrinsic value' in the economic sense. While I can't pay my taxes with it, I certainly can do many useful things with it, that no other curerncy in history can do without third party help.
Such as create blockchain enforcable contracts...
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/ContractsAnd, perhaps eventually, the transfer of asset titles...
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AnkP_cVZTCMLIzw4DvsW6M8Q2JC0lIzrTLuoWu2z1BE/edit?pli=1http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24620-bitcoin-moves-beyond-mere-money.htmlAnd the (terriblely underused) transaction scripting system promises to do much, much more
I, for one, do see value in a completely impartial, automated and near zero cost system that not only replaces most of the functions of brick * mortor banks, but most of the functions of the county clerck as well.
But the product of those resources is just tons of giga-hashes and the appropriate hashing equipment. Maybe if Bitcon's proof-of-work was something useful that would be a different case. Then maybe people would want Bitcoins for their own usefulness.
As noted above, I want them for their unique usefulness. But even if I didn't, my gigahashes also heat my bsement in winter. Nothing is wasted as far as I am concerned.
Also there's no doubt that people are entering Bitcoin mostly because they're expecting the price in the future to be higher. Definitely not because there's a lot you can do with Bitcoin at the moment, because there isn't. In fact, adoption by merchants seems to be the biggest thing the community is trying to achieve. So that means the bulk of Bitcoin-wealth right now is speculation. And that definitely spells a bubble.
Time will tell.