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Here Are the Big Names Who Are Backing and Slamming Bitcoin

November 3, 2017 by Blockchain Consultants

Is bitcoin a legitimate asset, or a super-bubble waiting to implode? As prices for the cryptocurrency skyrocket, investors and pundits are increasingly taking sides.

Whether you’re a backer or a detractor, what’s not in doubt is bitcoin’s dizzying rally this year. The most widely used digital currency crossed the $7,000 mark on Thursday and is up more than 650 percent in 2017. It’s managed to whip past the $100 billion total value mark despite governmental crackdowns and mainstream market skepticism. Bitcoin was trading at $7,218 at 9:37 a.m. New York time on Friday.

With the rhetoric for and against heating up this week amid bitcoin’s barreling gains, here’s a look at where some big names in finance stand — from those who see it as the natural evolution of money, to the naysayers waiting for the asset to crash and burn.

Bitcoin’s Backers

  • The digital currency’s evangelists are led by Roger Ver, known in the industry as “Bitcoin Jesus.” Ver remains optimistic about bitcoin’s sustainability amid attempts from governments like China to curb some of the more speculative elements of trading. “The only way to stop (bitcoin) is to turn off the entire Internet in the entire world and keep it turned off,” he said in a September interview with Bloomberg News.
  • Some countries are jumping on the bitcoin bandwagon, with Argentina’s most important futures market considering offering services to investors in digital currencies, while Turkish Central Bank Governor Murat Cetinkaya said digital currencies may contribute to financial stability if designed well.
  • Ronnie Moas, who for the past 13 years has made more than 900 stock recommendations via his one-man show at Standpoint Research, upped his 2018 price forecast to $11,000 from $7,500 on Friday. He maintained his $50,000 target for 2027, though he said it was conservative.

Bitcoin’s Detractors

  • Severin Cabannes, deputy chief executive officer at Societe Generale SA, was the latest big bank official to weigh in, saying that “Bitcoin today is in my view very clearly in a bubble,” in a Bloomberg Television interview Friday.
  • Speculation around bitcoin is the “very definition of a bubble,” Credit Suisse Group AG CEO Tidjane Thiam told reporters in Zurich on Thursday. “The only reason today to buy or sell bitcoin is to make money,” and such speculation “has rarely led to a happy end,” Thiam said.
  • Themis Trading LLC raised a red flag this week after CME Group Inc. announced plans to introduce bitcoin futures, saying the world’s largest exchange owner appeared to have “caved in” to pressure from clients. “A bitcoin future would be placing a seal of approval around a very risky, unregulated instrument that has a history of fraud and manipulation,” the firm said in a blog post.
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon remains one of Wall Street’s most strident bitcoin opponents, saying in October that people who buy the currency are “stupid” and that governments will eventually crush it.

On the Fence

  • While CME’s decision to offer bitcoin futures by the end of the year appears to be an endorsement of the currency’s viability, CEO Terry Duffy demurred when asked whether he’s concerned about a potential bubble. “I’ve seen a lot of different bubbles over the last 37 years,” he said on Bloomberg TV. “It’s not up to me to predict if it’s a bubble or not — what I’m here to do is to help people manage risk.”
  • Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd Blankfein isn’t sure what to make of bitcoin and is unwilling to reject the digital currency just yet. “I know that once upon a time, a coin was worth $5 if it had $5 worth of gold in it,” Blankfein said in another Bloomberg TV interview. “Now we have paper that is just backed by fiat … maybe in the new world, something gets backed by consensus.”
  • While Thomas J. Lee of Fundstrat Global Advisors has turned cautious on bitcoin in the short term because of its big gains, he remains a long-term bull on the digital currency — maintaining a 2022 price target of $25,000.

    Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-11-03/big-investors-are-taking-sides-in-bitcoin-s-great-bubble-debate

    Filed Under: digital currency Tagged With: Argentina, Bitcoin, China, CME GROUP INC, Conservative, cryptocurrency, Currency, New York, Severin Cabannes, Technology, Tidjane Thiam

    Bitcoin Is Leaving Other Digital Coins in the Dust

    October 27, 2017 by Blockchain Consultants

    Uncertainty surrounding another possible split in bitcoin is weighing on the value of the hundreds of other digital tokens that have been issued this year as the price of the biggest cryptocurrency soars.

    “Everyone always thinks about going to bitcoin as a conservative position,” said Stan Miroshnik, chief executive of the Element Group, which helps startups with initial coin offerings.

    While bitcoin’s underlying network is slated to go through a major software upgrade in November to increase transaction speed and reduce costs, it could also cause disruptions. Investors are playing it safe and shifting funds from other digital currencies into bitcoin because it typically offers greater liquidity in times of uncertainty.

    And there is the bonus of additional coins being issued to owners if developers split the blockchain, the digitized ledger on which the bitcoin is based. That already happened this week with the creation of bitcoin gold, which came about three months after bitcoin cash was created.

    As bitcoin flirts with another record high, prices of many tokens that startups sold to raise capital are crashing. The Bletchley Ethereum Token Index is down nearly 16 percent in the last month. Around 10 percent of the money invested in tokens has already flowed out because of the software switch, according to Lucas Nuzzi, a senior analyst at Digital Asset Research.

    That could mean a rude awakening for the many companies planning offerings. Some 75 ICOs are already scheduled for November, up from 64 last month, according to CoinSchedule.

    Some companies, such as virtual-goods trader Wax, are adjusting the timing of ICOs because of the software change. After all, many offerings raise funds through bitcoin, and investors aren’t parting with those. The switch, known in industry lingo as a hard fork, could also lead to other disruptions. Coinbase, the leading online exchange, will halt bitcoin buying and selling for 24 hours before the upgrade.

    "Forks are full of uncertainties," said Malcolm CasSelle, president of Wax, which pushed the start of its presale back a week to Oct. 17. "Many exchanges don’t allow funds to move. That friction means token sales are slowed down."

    Miners, whose computers support the network, are divided on whether they’d support the change, called SegWit2x, or not. That could lead to other issues, such as slow transaction times.

    "The markets seem to think that the fork will go smoothly," said Kyle Samani, managing partner at crypto hedge fund Multicoin Capital. "I do not believe that it will. If things go extra poorly, it could tank the whole market, or we could see a major flight to bitcoin/ether." Ether is the second-largest cryptocurrency in market value after bitcoin.

    Some investors are even doubling down on bitcoin, hoping a split will bring additional profits. Because not all computers running the network will switch to the new software, that will result in emergence of two competing networks, each running its own version of the currency. Holders of bitcoin will get both coins.

    Bitcoin cash, the new iteration of the currency when it split for the first time last summer, rallied for almost a month before declining. After a second split this week, bitcoin continued its rise, while holders also got bitcoin gold, which is currently worth about $122. Bitcoin’s price has more than doubled, to $5,956, since the time of the first split.

    "ICO tokens are not the hot story at the moment, but could return to the forefront of people’s imaginations as the bitcoin fever trade unwinds and a search for yield returns in other markets," said Charles Hayter, co-founder of market tracker CryptoCompare.

      Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-26/bitcoin-dividend-play-is-leaving-other-digital-coins-in-the-dust

      Filed Under: cryptocurrency Tagged With: Bitcoin, Commodity Futures, Conservative, Currency, Futures Markets, Generic 1st 'GC' Future, Markets, Software, Technology

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