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Why Bitcoin Boomed During the Government Shutdown

Daniel_Stuckey writes "Just two weeks after the Feds shuttered the Silk Road, the notorious online drug bazaar, Bitcoin prices have touched a five-month high — with a single Bitcoin fetching nearly $156 on Tokyo-based exchange Mt. Gox. Bitcoin's resiliency can no longer be denied, especially as the digital currency continued its ascendancy even against the backdrop of a U.S. government in utter disarray. At the 11th hour of the crisis, President Obama signed a bill that ended the partial government shutdown and, more importantly, raised the debt ceiling, an arbitrary limit on the amount of money the country can borrow that would have been surpassed today. If Congress had failed to reach a deal and the U.S. was unable to pay its bills, the results might have been catastrophic, eclipsing the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers five years ago, the domino that could trigger the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression."

3 of 282 comments (clear)

  1. China by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The recent price of Bitcoin has far more to do with explosive adoption in China than anything happening in the United States.

  2. Re: Nobody cares about bitcoin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They aren't even anonymous transactions... if you convert bitcoins to cash, that's a major weakness.

    And they have a great use: eliminating payment processing costs. Those costs are distributed among the people who run the mining software.

  3. Re:This is proof? Really? by felrom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Gold dropped because the market's built-in assumption that the Fed would keep printing money to finance the government's deficits forever was temporarily shaken by the possibility of maybe some sane fiscal policy showing its head for once. Then gold went back up when the deal was signed, signifying full steam ahead on printing and deficits. It made absolute sense.

    But yeah, this article in particular is just a bad case of hindsight bias.