Bitcoin’s Time Is Now. Don’t Miss It
Bitcoin is, according to some, facing its
first great test—whether it can perform as a store of value during a wider
market crash.
Bitcoin has, by this measure, failed
spectacularly. The bitcoin price collapsed in the face of coronavirus-induced
chaos, losing around half its value as traditional markets recorded historic
falls.
But this isn't make or break for bitcoin:
bitcoin's success isn't judged by its price but by its digital scarcity in a
time of helicopter money, quantitative easing (QE) and record low interest
rates.
Earlier this week, the U.S. Federal Reserve
slashed interest rates to almost zero and fired a $1 trillion stimulus bazooka
in an attempt to protect the world's largest economy from a coronavirus-induced
shutdown.
This followed similar interest rate cuts
around the world as governments and central banks scrambled to reassure
markets. The rushed action largely failed, with the Dow suffering its worst day
since the Black Monday market crash in 1987 and its third-worst day ever.
Today, U.S. Treasury secretary Steven
Mnuchin said he was poised to write checks to millions of Americans to try to
offsetting the economic burden of the coronavirus pandemic—an unconventional
economic stimulus measure that's been popularized recently by some left-leaning
economists as universal basic income (UBI) but was once known as helicopter
money: freshly-printed cash that appears to drop from the sky into the pockets
of the public (a concept some crypto investors will be familiar with).
"We are looking at sending checks to
Americans immediately," Mnuchin said, speaking at a a White House press
conference. "Americans need cash now, and the president wants to get cash
now—and I mean now in the next two weeks."
Elsewhere, Spain is apparently weighing
similar helicopter money style stimulus—something that could play havoc with
the economically joined-up eurozone.
Many traditional economists dislike
helicopter money. They say it's harder to remove from the system and could
cause long-term inflation to soar.
The world's central banks are being forced
to consider such extreme options due to the lingering effects of the 2008
global financial crisis, with many of their less radical policy tools still in
effect.
"The U.S. is about to be addicted to
that helicopter money really fast," bitcoin proponent and co-founder of
hedge fund Morgan Creek Digital, Anthony Pompliano, said via Twitter.
Meanwhile, some market watchers are worried
the broad sell-offs, combined with helicopter money proposals, could cause a
cash glut.
"At the moment, what we're seeing from
the market is an unprecedented move to cash," said Mati Greenspan, founder
of financial advisory firm Quantum Economics.
"Everyone is liquidating everything
they can. Once the dust settles, and we start to see how the end of the
'coronacrisis' might look, people are going to be sitting on way too much
fiat."
The Fed's latest offering to the market, a
special fund to keep credit flowing through the U.S. economy during coronavirus
scare, has somewhat satiated investors today.
The Dow, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq
each rose around 5% by the market close. Bitcoin was more-or-less unmoved by
the news and has been treading water since taking a big step lower last
weekend—hovering around $5,000 per bitcoin.
"Bitcoin is built for these
events," said Keld van Schreven, co-founder and managing director at
blockchain investment firm KR1.
"Bitcoin, ether and other crypto
networks needs no bail out or QE. They just need a handful of servers to run,
verify and complete transactions. Bitcoin, ether and other crypto has taken the
weakest link (us) out. This only makes it stronger."
Whatever the bitcoin price does, it can't
be artificially boosted by central banks or governments—it will only be
supported by increased demand.
Bitcoin can't be printed or pasted from a
clipboard. Bitcoin is, regardless of its extreme price volatility, consistency
in inconsistent times.
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