www.armstrongeconomics.com
QUESTION:
It certainly seems that the cryptocurrency world has its flaws and may
even be worse than traditional bank accounts and credit cards. They keep
getting hacked. So they are trying to defeat central banks but may be
running into the arms of scammers and thieves. I read one guy even
claimed Bitcoin would be the new reserve currency. I really do not
understand these fools. How can Bitcoin become the reserve currency?
Where does this really end?
EP
ANSWER:
I really do not know. The dollar is the reserve currency BECAUSE
it has a $20 trillion debt that is used globally to park money. Europe
never created a single debt market and that is why the euro never
managed to compete with the dollar. There is just no way Bitcoin can
become the reserve currency. That is really la-la-land. Where does this
end? The technology may be absorbed by governments and perhaps you end
up with a single electronic currency for each country. As far as
circumventing central banks and governments, they can shut it down
whenever they want by simply declaring cryptocurrency is for criminals
as Australia is trying to do with cash.
With respect to the hacking, well easy come easy go. For the second
time in just a few days, hackers launched a raid on a South Korean
cryptocurrency exchange. The hackers had captured in one night about €27
million euros, the trading platform Bithumb had to admit. This is
number six worldwide in terms of trading volume for cryptocurrencies.
Bithumb announced that it would compensate its users.
The prices of most cryptocurrencies fell after the second South
Korean incident within a few weeks. Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency,
fell 2% that day. These attacks are starting to wear down the
cryptocurrency market, and we may yet see a decline further into July.
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