World News: Governments and banks once mocked Bitcoin. Now they want in on it – #INA


Bitcoin has proven to be one of the best-performing assets in modern history.
The value of the cryptocurrency has increased some 1,000 times over the past decade, far outpacing US stocks and real estate.
Buoyed by United States President-elect Donald TrumpтАЩs crypto-friendly stance, BitcoinтАЩs record rally hit a new high of $107,000 on Monday after the Republican reiterated his intention to create a Bitcoin strategic reserve.
Bitcoin, the first decentralised digital currency, was invented by the pseudonymous figure Satoshi Nakamoto in the wake of the 2007-2008 global financial crisis.
Nakamoto introduced the blockchain system тАУ a digital ledger that stores transactions in a network of computers тАУ to enable anyone to make financial transactions without the involvement of banks, financial firms or governments.
Once widely derided as a speculative asset with no intrinsic value, Bitcoin is being taken increasingly seriously by governments, financial institutions and investors alike.
Boaz Sobrado, a London-based fintech analyst, said Bitcoin has transformed from being a niche asset favoured by political dissidents and criminals carrying out Illicit transactions тАЬto something that central banks have to keep in mind and considerтАЭ.
тАЬThe IMF has put very firm anti-crypto political guidelines into place when negotiating with countries that might require its own assistance. ItтАЩs gone from being an academic question to a practical, real one and one that central banks are taking very seriously now,тАЭ Sobrado told Al Jazeera.
In January, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved Bitcoin ETFs (exchange-traded funds), allowing investors to have exposure to the asset on the stock exchange for the first time.
In an October report, the US Department of the Treasury referred to Bitcoin as тАЬdigital goldтАЭ, noting its use as a store of value.
A number of countries have made big bets on the cryptocurrency.
El Salvador has accumulated some $600m worth of Bitcoin reserves and is one of just a handful of countries, along with the Central African Republic, that accepts the asset as legal tender.
Other countries, including the US and the United Kingdom, have acquired large holdings of Bitcoin through the seizure of assets implicated in criminal activity.
The US has seized at least 215,000 Bitcoins, valued at almost $21bn at current prices, since 2020, according to an analysis by crypto firm 21.co.
With Trump returning to the White House, Bitcoin supporters are hopeful that cryptocurrencies will gain unprecedented legitimacy after years of government-led crackdowns on the sector.
Despite once labelling Bitcoin тАЬa scamтАЭ, Trump has emerged as arguably the worldтАЩs most powerful advocate for the asset.
After pledging to make the US тАЬcrypto capital of the planetтАЭ, he has picked several high-profile crypto enthusiasts to join his incoming administration, including former PayPal Chief Operating Officer David Sacks as crypto tsar and Paul Atkins as SEC chair.
TrumpтАЩs pro-crypto stance has found allies in the US Congress, such as Senator Cynthia Lummis, a Republican from Wyoming, who earlier this year introduced the BITCOIN Act of 2024, which would include Bitcoin among reserve assets such as gold and oil as a long-term store of value.
Under LummisтАЩs plans, the government would buy roughly 200,000 Bitcoins every year for five years, and then hold the assets for 20 years as a hedge against inflation.
тАЬIf we did that with five percent of all the Bitcoin that will ever exist тАУ which is roughly a million Bitcoin тАУ we could cut our debt in half in 20 years,тАЭ Lummis said┬аin a television interview with Fox Business.
On Wall Street, derision and mockery have also given way to more positive appraisals.
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, who once described Bitcoin as an тАЬindex of money launderingтАЭ, in January said the commodity was тАЬno different than what gold represented for thousands of yearsтАЭ and an тАЬasset class that protects youтАЭ.
тАШCurrency of resistanceтАЩ
The key attribute of Bitcoin that makes it revolutionary is that it separates money from the state, according to Max Keiser, senior Bitcoin adviser to El Salvador President Nayib Bukele.
тАЬThis is the first time in history that this has ever happened тАУ money exists that has no central authority controlling it. This is what makes it unique, very powerful,тАЭ Keiser told Al Jazeera.
тАЬThereтАЩs now this growing feeling that the 21st century will be the century of Bitcoin.тАЭ
Keiser spotted BitcoinтАЩs potential early on and advised people to buy it when its value was only $1 in 2011. That year, he and his wife, television presenter Stacy Herbert, called Bitcoin тАЬthe currency of resistanceтАЭ, and predicted it would top $100,000.
One of the reasons Bitcoin has gained strength in value is the poor performance of economies such as Argentina, where inflation last year skyrocketed more than 200 percent, according to Gerald Celente, founder and director of the New York-based Trends Research Institute.
тАЬPeople were seeing their currencies being devaluedтАж People were saying: тАШIтАЩm losing all my money, what am I going to do?тАЩ They canтАЩt afford to buy gold, so they started buying whatever they could in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, so that kept it strong,тАЭ Celente told Al Jazeera.
Since TrumpтАЩs election, BitcoinтАЩs price has risen by more than 50 percent and with an incoming pro-crypto administration, Celente predicts an even greater rally.
тАЬ(The value) could go through the roof, but we donтАЩt see (Bitcoin) going down much at all,тАЭ he said.
Crypto supporters argue that BitcoinтАЩs winning advantage is that its global supply is capped at 21 million.
Unlike central banks that can print money indefinitely, BitcoinтАЩs supply stays constant no matter the demand, which has helped boost its value against the dollar.
Armando Pantoja, futurist and tech investor, believes that Bitcoin will appreciate in value тАЬforeverтАЭ, likening the purchase of the asset to buying real estate in Manhattan.
тАЬBitcoin has value not because of the currency, but because of the technology that governs it, blockchain technology,тАЭ Pantoja told Al Jazeera.
тАЬIn BitcoinтАЩs blockchain, thereтАЩs a certain supply of Bitcoin that comes out every 10 minutes, and every four years they cut it in half. Over time there is less and less Bitcoin being generated.
тАЬOnce it reaches the limit, no more can be createdтАж ThatтАЩs why itтАЩs going to keep going up, every four years when they cut the supply, it has to respond positively. It has to keep going up to supply the demand.тАЭ
Keiser predicts Bitcoin will reach $1m in value in the coming years, with a market cap at least equal to goldтАЩs market cap of $20 trillion.
тАЬThat would be $1m a coin. I think that would be a conservative estimate for the price for the next three to four years,тАЭ he said.
BitcoinтАЩs stellar rise, however, has not convinced everyone.
Despite its recent rally, the commodity continues to be extremely volatile.
After hitting $107,000 at the start of the week, the asset had by Friday plunged below $97,000.
Many financial analysts continue to view Bitcoin as a bubble with little to support its stunning rise.
тАЬThe more resources Americans misallocate to #Bitcoin and #crypto-related businesses, the fewer resources will be available to devote to making stuff we actually need,тАЭ Peter Schiff, chief economist at Euro Pacific Capital, said in a post on X last month.
тАЬThe end result will be larger trade deficits, a weaker dollar, higher inflation, and a lower standard of living.тАЭ
Even as TrumpтАЩs positive stance towards Bitcoin has thrilled crypto enthusiasts, some pro-crypto governments have reined in their support of the sector.
El Salvador announced this week that it would privatize or close its cryptocurrency wallet тАЬChivoтАЭ as part of the terms of a $1.4bn loan deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
BukeleтАЩs government also agreed to make acceptance of Bitcoin by businesses voluntary, within steps to assuage the IMFтАЩs concerns about Bitcoin-related risks.
Central bank digital currencies
Some crypto supporters see governments and central banks taking a leading role in the global march towards digitised money with the development of their own currencies.
Celente of the Trends Research Institute said the US, for example, could create its own digital currency as a way to pay off its federal debt.
тАЬThereтАЩs no way the US can pay off their $36 trillion worth of government debt. They may come up with a new cryptocurrency as part of CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currency),тАЭ Celente said.
тАЬYouтАЩre seeing more and more of the central banks talking about CBDCs, theyтАЩre definitely going to go into that direction,тАЭ Celente added.
тАЬTheyтАЩre going to use this as an excuse to come up with a coin because they cannot pay off the debt that they have now. TheyтАЩre going to say, тАШThis (digital currency) is worth a lot more than the dollar, yuan, the euro,тАЩ and use that to pay off their debt.тАЭ
Some observers have warned that the introduction of CBDCs would open a PandoraтАЩs box of problems related to government control and surveillance of peopleтАЩs finances.
TrumpтАЩs pick for commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, is the CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, which manages the stockpile of US Treasuries that back Tether, the largest stablecoin by market cap.
Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that are pegged to a traditional commodity or currency to maintain a stable price. They have reached record volumes of more than $200bn in total market cap.
Sobrado said there could be an opening for Tether to become the national de facto privatised CBDC for the US, and for smaller economies such as the UAE, Hong Kong, Singapore and Switzerland to issue their own CBDCs.
тАЬThe pro-crypto voices and Fed-critical voices have never been louder in the White House,тАЭ Sobrado said.
Celente said he had no doubt that the future of money is digital.
тАЬThereтАЩs no question at all,тАЭ he affirmed.
Governments and banks once mocked Bitcoin. Now they want in on it
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