Cryptocurrencies don't make sense
Jon Danielsson
Director of the Systemic Risk Centre and reader in finance, London School of Economics (LSE)
Reposted from
I have been trying to understand what the point of cryptocurrencies is, without success. I just don't get them.
As far as I can tell, they are supposed to be some combination of:
- a type of money;
- an investment;
- something that provides privacy and security and efficiency;
- something else, new and magical and mystical that I am too stupid or old to understand.
Are cryptocurrencies money?
What do we need money for? Three things:
- facilitating transactions;
- a store of value;
- lending of last resort.
Any form of money should be evaluated according to those criteria.
We have used many things throughout history as money, like seashells, cigarettes, silver and gold. These are all scarce real assets with value to their users, available in small units and easy to transact.
No country has such money anymore. Instead, what we use is fiat money, a currency without any intrinsic value. Paper printed by the government, whose quantity is amplified by the financial system. It is only valuable because the government guarantees it is.
Fiat money issued by a credible modern central bank is vastly superior to money based on real assets like gold, not least because the supply of fiat money can be adjusted to best serve the economy, rather than be dominated by the production of some natural resource. The volume of cryptocurrency cannot be adjusted in the same way.
Of course, governments are tempted to abuse fiat money and print too much, as the first creator of fiat money did, the Chinese government in the 13th century. More recently, the stagflation of the 1970s is due to the central banks being bad stewards of money.
Because the governments of the time could not be trusted, several thinkers proposed free monetary systems, such as Hayek in 1977, discussion which presages current cryptocurrency debates. Still, advances in monetary policy eventually gave us more stable money by the 1980s.
So how do cryptocurrencies stack up on the criteria for money mentioned above: as a store of value, ease of transactions and for lending of last resort?
They are vastly inferior for transactions. Transactions with cash are costless, anonymous, and immediate. Electronic transactions are very cheap and also immediate, and can be done in any amount.
Bitcoin transactions take an hour or more, with a cost of at least $25, and they are not all that anonymous. Yes, there are cryptocurrencies that promise more efficiency or privacy. But even then, while it can take a long time to find someone who accepts Bitcoin, it is much longer with the competitors. Meanwhile, the largest amounts that can be transacted by cryptocurrencies are dwarfed by those one can transact with fiat money.
And what about store of value? Neither cryptocurrencies nor fiat money have any intrinsic value. What matters is credibility – our expectation that the money will retain its value over time.
For fiat money, the central banks are committed to keeping its value stable at a decreasing rate of 2% per year. The major central banks have been quite successful at keeping their tracking error small for a long time.
Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are much inferior in this regard. Their value doubles or halves in a span of few days. One cannot say with any degree of certainty that one's holdings of cryptocurrencies will hold their value over the next week, not to mention a month or year. If one holds cryptocurrencies, it is for speculative reasons, not as a store of value.
That leaves lending of last resort (LOLR), providing liquidity to financial institutions in times of crises. This has been an essential function of central banks ever since Walter Bagehot’s 1873 analysis of the 1866 crisis. LOLR was last used in 2008, and will certainly be needed again at some point in the future. There is no such facility in any of the cryptocurrencies.
If cryptocurrencies are money, they are a much inferior to existing fiat money.
Are cryptocurrencies investment?
Cryptocurrencies, along with fiat money, have been called Ponzi schemes. Not quite. The definition of a Ponzi scheme is an investment where existing investors are paid for by new investments. Neither cryptocurrencies nor fiat money fit the definition.
But are the cryptocurrencies an investment? It depends on what one means by investment.
The value of a stock or a bond reflects future income appropriately discounted to the present. Not so with cryptocurrencies or fiat money. They have no intrinsic value. Their value is caused by scarcity, as well as the cost of mining or government promises. However, mining is sunk cost, not a promise of future income.
The only reason cryptocurrencies retain value is because we expect other people in the future to value them the same, or more than we do now. Just like collecting stamps. The value of stamps is created by scarcity and expectations of future investors pricing them more highly than we do now.
Cryptocurrencies are not an investment in the same way as a stock or a bond. They are an investment in the same sense as stamp collections are.
However, even then, most people don't use fiat money directly as a store of value except in small amounts. At the very least, one can keep fiat money in a bank account or government bonds that earn interest. An investment that is as safe as the government. The possibility of such near riskless lending at stable rates is absent for cryptocurrencies.
So if cryptocurrencies are an investment, they are more like stamps or lottery tickets than fiat money, stocks, or bonds.
Credibility
The intrinsic value of fiat money is underpinned by the credibility of the government and the central banks tasked with controlling money.
Central banks are independent and with considerable political cover, essential to ensure the credibility of fiat money. Countries that disregard the latest developments in monetary policy, like Venezuela, do that to their cost.
Central bank independence, political cover, and reputation for competence are key. Jerome Powell, the current chair of the Federal Reserve system, is the most powerful bureaucrat in the world. General Joseph Dunford, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, might have nuclear weapons in his arsenal, but he reports to President Trump. Jerome Powell does not.
While our faith in central banks has increased considerably since Friedrich Hayek wrote his article cited above, it could still be higher. However, I can download detailed performance statistics on fiat money dating back decades. I know the supply of money and I know the policy tools used and I can make up my own mind. Information about cryptocurrencies and other activity statistics is much harder to come by and have a much smaller history.
The value of the euro and of the dollar is underpinned by the credibility of the ECB or the Fed. With cryptocurrencies, it is the credibility of some unknown entities and processes.
I trust the central banks in developed economies much more than I trust any of the cryptocurrencies.
Privacy and security
That leaves privacy and security.
Cash is 100% anonymous, but one is at some risk of theft. Electronic transactions are not anonymous, but are safer.
While some cryptocurrencies promise anonymity, the most popular, Bitcoin does not, unless one is really careful in hiding one's tracks using skills that are only available to a small group of users. The reason is that transaction records on the blockchain cannot be changed or deleted and are therefore searchable.
Meanwhile, not a day passes without reports of theft from cryptocurrency investors. The best advice is to keep one's private key on an air-gapped burner laptop.
Cash and electronic money are also subject to theft. Still, there is no need for a private key with cash transactions and keys are much less important for electronic cash transactions. There are multiple layers of security that protect us. The fiat money of non-expert users, provided they take basic precautions, is very safe.
I feel quite confident in doing online banking without resorting to an air-gapped burner laptop.
Cryptocurrencies are only safe from theft if one is expert and takes elaborate precautions. We are much more likely to be a victim of a crime with cryptocurrencies than cash or electronic money.
So…
Cryptocurrencies are inferior to most fiat money and investments, while they do not provide privacy or security.
When I say this to advocates of cryptocurrencies they usually respond in two ways – that I don't understand cryptocurrencies, and that they have new and wonderful qualities that I miss.
There are many things I don't get, but I have put some effort into understanding the mechanics of cryptocurrencies. However, one can know all the mechanics, all the geeky technical details, and still not have a clue about what they mean.
Take as an example human beings. I can know all the physics and chemistry and physiology, understand how molecules and organs operate, yet still don't know the first thing about an individual.
Its the same with cryptocurrencies. Knowing the mechanical details does not translate to understanding their economic function.
Cryptocurrencies are more like a religion or a cult, not a rational economic phenomena. They even have their own foundation myth, the elusive Satoshi Nakamoto.
I await my enlightenment.
References
Bagehot, W (1873) "Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market".
Hayek, F A (1977), "Free-Market Monetary System".
Climate Tech founder and investor. Booting Up a Sustainable Future.
7 年I disagree. While there are some very valid points made in the article and the usefulness and longevity of cryptocurrencies is very much still to be determined, there are in my view a number of key issues with the assertions made in this article. My first issue is with the statement that “If cryptocurrencies are money, they are a much inferior to existing fiat money.” and the preceding arguments. Specifically regarding that it takes an hour and at least $25 for a Bitcoin transaction. This is akin to writing off air travel as “much inferior to existing modes of transport” after observing the Wright brothers take flight for the first time: “Well that’s pretty pointless, it only carried one person and barely stayed in the air for 12 seconds”. Or to the infamous 1995 Newsweek article writing off the internet because “[…] my local mall does more business in an afternoon than the entire Internet handles in a month” ( https://thenextweb.com/shareables/2010/02/27/newsweek-1995-buy-books-newspapers-straight-intenet-uh/ ) . Cryptocurrency is clearly still in its infancy. Nobody is suggesting we should be expecting to pay $25 transaction fees for a coffee. There are scalability issues that need addressing and are being worked on with new protocols and enhancements to existing protocols (Lightning, Plasma, Raiden,…) . It’s not the final product. Which leads on to the author’s concerns about its use as a store of value due to its volatility. Again, it’s in its infancy. It’s unclear whether it will work. Of course there is going to be a lot of speculation and volatility at this stage. Again, it’s not the final product. Moving on to the investment side: “So if cryptocurrencies are an investment, they are more like stamps or lottery tickets than fiat money, stocks, or bonds.” – this is simply not the case. A better analogy for the investment side would be to think of crypto assets as an investment in decentralized networks and ecosystems. If those networks become more useful and valuable then so does the value of the –scarce- tokens used in that network. At the infrastructure layer of crypto assets an often used analogy is what the value of the internet protocols would have been if they had been monetized. At the application layer it’s akin to the idea of the end users being (part) beneficiaries of networks such as Facebook, or owners of their own data. It’s clear that networks, data and information have huge value, just look at the largest companies in the world currently. The main investment thesis of crypto assets is for this value to be captured in a different way, by different participants of the network. This is very different from stamps and lottery tickets. Is it there yet? No, it’s not the final product. Which leads on to the final section about privacy and security and what can be summarized as the rather less that optimal current user experience in the space. I agree, it’s really not great. I’m biting my nails every time I click to confirm a transaction (with the button typically surrounded by big warning signs telling me it will be completely my fault if anything goes wrong). But two words: internet, 1993. It’s not the final product. Does it really make sense to dismiss something as not making sense at such an early stage? I personally prefer a world with air travel and internet.
Chief of Staff at London Quant Group - LQG Executive Director - The Institute For Quantitative Research - INQUIRE UK
7 年An excellent article - I have long doubted the value of cryptocurrencies and am comforted that I am not alone. I am pleased that you have explained clear reasons for justifiable and reasonable scepticism!