Bitcoin Could Rise By 165% To $2,000 in 2017 Driven by Trump's 'Spending Binge' and Dollar Rally (cnbc.com)
The price of Bitcoin could hit more than $2,000 in 2017 driven by expectations that U.S. President-elect Donald Trump may introduce economic stimulus policies, which could send inflation soaring and propel the dollar to record highs, a report from Saxo Bank claims. An anonymous reader shares a CNBC report: Bitcoin is currently trading around $754.51, according to CoinDesk data. A handle of over $2,000 would represent 165 percent appreciation. During his election campaign Trump has talked about an increase in fiscal spending. Saxo Bank's note said that this could increase the roughly $20 trillion of U.S. national debt and triple the current budget deficit from approximately $600 billion to $1.2-1.8 trillion, or some 6-10 percent of the country's current $18.6 trillion economy. As a result, the economy will grow and inflation will "sky rocket," forcing the U.S. Federal Reserve to hike interest rates at a faster pace and causing the U.S. dollar "to hit the moon." When inflation rises the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates to bring it under control. This causes the dollar to appreciate because it would be seen as an attractive currency for foreign investors.
Trump will tax it
Even if correct about Trump, fed rates are currently extremely low and the last hike was only because the market expected rates couldn't stay there forever not due to any kind of inflation. If anything we are close to deflation which is far far worse with a fiat currency. We actually NEED inflation in the US economy.
This is not a statement against a deflationary currency, I honestly think the math works out about the same but the US dollar is not deflationary and fiat systems depend on inflation to function properly.
I've been hearing promises of $2,000 Bitcoin due to $BIGECONOMICNEWSEVENT for awhile now. It never seems to pan out.
Honestly, I'd be impressed if it gets back to $1,000 like it did during the 2013 bubble.
how can I go buy a an $800 bitcoin now, and sell it next year for $2000?
Here we go again.
your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
You know, the headline looks identical to the thousands of "this investment will go through the roof!" spam I've been receiving for decades.
How is this any different?
-- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
And physicists could discover the particle responsible for gravity is a room temperature superconductor.
How is this a news story? Put away the bong please!
The two offered reasons seem to be mutually exclusive... Either we see inflation — as Trump's government prints money to finance the feared "binge" (which is oh so different from the wise Government Spending of the Obama era). Such printing may cause an inflation with dollar falling against other currencies — including BitCoin. In this case, BitCoin may, indeed, rise in value.
Or we see dollar "rally" — rise in value against other currencies, including BitCoin.
So, which is it?
I don't think, a raising of rates ever reversed inflation in the history of Federal Reserve — it can only slow it down. They would not even seek to stop it, considering the value of 1-2% per year "normal" (that's a tax on wealth, BTW).
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
is this investment advice? Where is the data?
This looks like rampant speculation.
his could increase the roughly $20 trillion of U.S. national debt and triple the current budget deficit...
or you could sober and realize that no matter how unqualified, despised, ignorant and inappropriate you think he is, a president is merely a figurehead for the party. as an example: George W Bush rubber stamped everything his party wanted and spent most of his days on vacation. He had no grand vision or goals. Barack Obamas party managed to pass the ACA, but once they lost control of the house and senate, Republicans shut down the government twice, reduced the US Credit rating, stonewalled the supreme court electoral process, and managed to obstruct nearly all legislative activity that didnt include prosecuting benghazi or affirming 'god' in the US Dollar.
The worst a trump presidency means for the US is another foreign war, market deregulation, and more class warfare from the 1%. main street will have the same pot-holes in 8 years that it has today.
Good people go to bed earlier.
If I had a nickel for every time I got a 'hot tip' about how a stock, gold, oil futures, or bitcoin was going to double in the next year; I would already be filthy rich. This story is nothing but spam.
He'd have to print trillions to have more of an impact than QE. Getting a bit tired of breathless Clintonista fearmongers.
This is more of the same stupid campaign to try to discredit him before he's had a chance to do anything. The guy isn't even sworn in yet and you fucking idiots are already trying to tell us how it's going to be. You've been habitually wrong about everything else, why should we start believing you democratic asswipes now?
Wish I had mod points for you today.
Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.
Keep buying your tulip bulbs. When the bubble pops as it predictably will what will you blame? Will it be China sneezing? Some random nonsense scandal from Trump? Or will it be enough to cripple the players, so they realize it was themselves all along?
How do we know this is true? It could be FAKE
Or they could be lying, like the Southern Poverty Law Center, that buried white kids getting racially harassed over Trump's victory.
Of course, "reputable" news outlets like the NY Times and the Washington Post ran with that FAKE news.
Report buried Trump-related ‘hate crimes’ against white kids
At least 2,000 educators around the country reported racist slurs and other derogatory language leveled against white students in the first days after Donald Trump was elected president. But the group that surveyed the teachers didn’t publish the results in its report on Trump-related “hate crimes.”
The Southern Poverty Law Center partnered with the American Federation of Teachers, which formally endorsed Hillary Clinton, to circulate the questionnaire among its 1.6 million mostly Democratic members. The survey was sent out to K-12 teachers and administrators who subscribe to its “Teaching Tolerance” newsletter.
The SPLC’s widely cited report — “The Trump Effect: The Impact of the 2016 Presidential Election on Our Nation’s Schools” — reported that 40 percent of the more than 10,000 educators who responded to the survey “have heard derogatory language directed at students of color, Muslims, immigrants and people based on gender or sexual orientation.”
The takeaway was that Trump-supporting white kids have been harassing minorities at the nation’s schools. And SPLC’s schools report, along with a broader report on alleged Trump-inspired hate crimes — “Ten Days After: Harassment and Intimidation in the Aftermath of the Election” — sparked breathless coverage in the New York Times, Washington Post and other major media.
The reports also triggered a statement Friday from the US Commission on Civil Rights, which expressed “deep concern” that “prejudice has reared its ugly head in public elementary and secondary schools.” The panel called for more federal funding to prosecute “hate crimes.”
But the SPLC didn’t present the whole story. The Montgomery, Ala.-based nonprofit self-censored results from a key question it asked educators — whether they agree or disagree with the following statement: “I have heard derogatory language or slurs about white students.”
Asked last week to provide the data, SPLC initially said it was having a hard time getting the information “from the researchers.” Pressed, SPLC spokeswoman Kirsten Bokenkamp finally revealed that “about 20 percent answered affirmatively to that question.”
Who knows? I wouldn't say there's no chance of a price increase though, it'll do what it'll do.
Inflation makes a currency weaker not stronger. The rate hikes would be done to counteract the weaker dollar at best bringing it back to normal levels. To make a comparison, this article is like saying "Crime will go up so we will get more police, so an increase in crime makes us safer."
So now we're going to have stories about US debt? We've gone for years and years here at good 'ol Slashdot without much mention of the crazy growth in US debt and the chronic deficits we run, year after year, good economy or not. But let Trump get elected and all the sudden we're talking about the debt! Oh crap, spending bad because inflation and debt and stuff!
Google reveals one Slashdot mention of US national debt in Oct. 2008 [1] related to the "Debt Clock" overflowing and needing another digit, and one other story in 2011 about some federal "Debt Reduction Super Committee" [2] that "failed" to come up with any savings. No other demonstrative mention on Slashdot of the $9.3 trillion in debt racked up during the last eight years.
At least we're talking about it again. Hello libtards; yes, the borrow and spend spree has been huge and the US deficit is out of control. I know you missed that for the last couple terms since the "news" sites you frequent — such as Slashdot — never mentioned it to you, but there it is; $20 trillion and counting.
[1] https://politics.slashdot.org/...
[2] https://politics.slashdot.org/...
Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
If inflation goes up, then the dollar goes down unless inflation is up more elsewhere. That's the way it works. Inflation cannot go up and have the dollar at record highs.
The price of bitcoin is more dependent on hacking or stolen wallets than on any monetary policy. It could just as easily fall 20% overnight. If you want to make a bet on inflation, it's much safer to invest in commodities (like oil or gold ETFs) or real estate (like REITs).
The OP established their idiocy when they wrote this
"As a result, the economy will grow and inflation will "sky rocket," forcing the U.S. Federal Reserve to hike interest rates at a faster pace and causing the U.S. dollar 'to hit the moon.'"
This is refutable by noticing that the Money Supply and Debt has gone up significantly with no apparent effect on interest rates in the last decades,
http://www.cqcabusinessresearch.com/2011/05/03/u-s-historical-interest-rates-and-the-money-supply/
And, if the OP knew for a fact that inflation will "Sky Rocket" they would be smart to keep their mouth shut and invest in futures and derivates and make money on their knowledge.
My only question is, what the heck is this drivel doing on Slashdot?
It usually means dump your bitcoin now, it's about to crash.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Wait a minute. Inflation (in which by definition the dollar gets less and less valuable) is some how going to draw investors to invest in T-bills to take advantage of the increased interest rates causing the dollar to soar against other currencies? What a load of crap. If the dollar is substantially decreasing in value no one is going to want to put their money in dollars. End of story.
propel the dollar to record highs
Inflation lowers the value of the currency, but looking at the speculated Bitcoin values is really bad estimator for the value of dollar. I hereby nominate "Hitting the Moon" as the worst metaphoric choice of this century for describing relatively moderate to high inflation.
Stop it with the debt crap! And stop comparing the spending of money against the GDP instead of our overall total value!
Let's say you own property worth $1,000,000, you have $200,000 in total debt, and you make $180,000 a year. Would you worry about spending an extra $20,000 this year?
Those numbers are the US economic numbers translated to personal terms.
The NET worth of the US was over $86 trillion at the end of last year. That's value minus debt folks. Get real.
With value like that, the government could spend nearly $5 trillion per year over taxes (enough for a $15K / year universal basic income for every American rich or poor) and only be creating about a 6% inflationary load against our overall worth. The resultant increase in consumer spending (people with less money spend a large portion of what they get instead of banking it) would be like attaching solid rocket boosters to the economy. With proper management, deflationary pressures could be created using the greater economies of scale to counteract the inflation. A win for all!
Stop the fear mongering!
What was not? "Cash for clunkers", perhaps?..
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
...enjoy a historically reasonably-stable or rising price of goods, and don't have to rely upon this speculative bullshit.
I type this as I hold roughly fifteen thousand dollars of opal in my hands.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
When Trump talks about spending, it's a "binge".
But a Democrat president can spend like there's no tomorrow and it gets names like "stimulus spending" or "quantitative easing".
No double standard, certainly.
Haven't the Democrats told us since 2008 that the ONLY way out of a recession is to spend money the government doesn't have?
-Styopa
As I recall, Congress is the one who spends money, not the President. All the President can do is ask Congress to spend money like a drunken sailor.
And with the general dislike of Trump on both sides of the aisle, I'm not seeing much inclination for Congress to let The Donald go on a spending binge....
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
Still Pumping bitcoin, still no credibility.
We can look forward to another six months of BUY BUY BUY BUY B1TC0INS NOW!!!1! spam posts on slashdot every day.
I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
"When inflation rises the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates to bring it under control. This causes the dollar to appreciate because it would be seen as an attractive currency for foreign investors."
I'm so confused. Isn't that a bit like saying that shooting your hand off is good for your health, because you will be forced to see a doctor??
Might makes right irrelevant.
This isn't a "rise" in the real currency bitcoin as much as it is a "fall" in the fake currency the dollar.
I'm sure Trump will be the first to say "Suck on that, China!".
My farts could be worth $1M each too!
"could", "may", "might" are weasel words where the facts don't support anything.
FTFA, Bitcoin is currently trading around $754.51, according to fake news published by CoinDesk data..."
TFTFY. Don't you just love the new post-truth economy?
What kindergarden did this journalist fail out of. There is so much factually wrong in TFA that it's hard to know where to start. Just off the top of my head:
- Massive spending binge = inflation = a decrease in the value of the dollar, not a "surge"
- "triple the current budget deficit from approximately $600 billion"...um, the current deficit is $1.4 trillion. The other figure comes from accounting tricks that would be illegal for anyone other than the government
- If the federal reserve dramatically raises interest rates, the interest on the massive national debt will skyrocket. The government will meet payments by issuing more debt (how else?). This will lead to more inflation, not to the dollar "hitting the moon"
- Anyway, if the dollar were to hit the moon, then BitCoin would be worth less in terms of dollars, not more. So the whole premise of the article is nonsense
How does an utterly ignorant article like this get published anywhere other than The Onion?????
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
But by abandoning the gold standard and not coming up with anything concrete to replace gold, we effectively said our currency is no longer tied to anything tangible of any value, so only faith in our leaders managing everything keeps it afloat.
IMO, that's proven to be a terrible fiscal policy -- as we saw with the Federal Reserve running out of techniques or ideas to control things during the last economic crash. Interest rates were dropped to near 0% and none of the decreases were having the expected/desired effect on the economy.
Gold may not be the right material to back our currency with (probably isn't for several reasons, including the high costs and requirements to store enough of it to back the amount of currency in circulation). But the concept makes a whole lot of sense. If you don't possess enough of the raw material to back additional currency with, you can't just go crazy printing off money to pay whatever debts it's politically convenient in the short term to run up.
IMO, Bitcoin was never really suitable as a primary form of currency for everyone to use on a daily basis. If nothing else, the technology is just too complicated to facilitate easy enough, fast enough transactions. The beauty in it is its potential for universal acceptance while preserving anonymity. (Cash has always allowed anonymous transactions, but with the requirement that you physically hand it over from person A to B - creating difficulties in keeping it anonymous. If anyone video records you doing the transaction, for example? Then it's no longer truly anonymous.) When it was still really new, you had lots of people just experimenting with it -- buying pizzas with it and so forth. But as it's matured, it's clearly become something best used only when you need the advantages it brings to the table.
... and maybe I'm a Chinese jet pilot.
Ok, I just answered my own question. This guy's article is so ignorant that I looked up his qualifications as a "technology correspondent". Here they are:
- News assistant at CNBC for 2 years
- Reporter for CNBC for 1 year
- Has a BA in English Literature, and as MA in Journalism
Yep, he's qualified to write about technology issues. Well, as well qualified as most journalists who do so, anyway... He clearly has deep qualification to prognosticate about financial issues as well. /sarc
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
That's an interesting definition, could you cite, where you got it from? It seems wrong — as it totally ignores non-productive wealth, such as precious metals, Bitcoins, intellectual property, and currency. By your definition, an owner of, say, a shoe-repair shop is richer than a guy with a $10 mln bank-account...
Which means, that whoever earned those dollars lost some of their value. Where did it go — dollars aren't apples, they don't spoil? In a fiat-money situation, the government prints paper money — it gets to spend it first, before inflation diminishes it. When people lose wealth and government gains it — even if not all of it — how is it not tax?
Now, it is not tax on all forms of wealth, merely on savings held in dollars. You may think, you are earning by holding your monies in a saving account, but in reality you barely keep up with inflation — whatever profit you should be getting is taxed away from you. By inflation.
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
There's no way that Trump's policies will substantially increase inflation, for a number of reasons.
The biggest reason is that it's very easy for the Fed to reign in inflation by increasing interest rates, and by all accounts a Trump presidency is likely to try to push the Fed to be more aggressive about doing this than the current Federal Reserve Board.
The next biggest reason is that Trump won't really be doing much of anything to increase spending. Trump and the Republicans will very likely blow the federal deficit wide open, but this will primarily be through tax cuts to the rich, which have very little impact on inflation.
I'm pretty sure that we can expect low inflation and decent economic growth over the next couple of years. But Trump, by removing financial regulation, will make another crash like the 2008 crash much more likely. When that next crash happens, then Bitcoin and gold will very likely spike in price (it'll be impossible to predict precisely when: sooner with Trump than it would have been with Clinton, but it could still be 5-10 years away).
Deflation is worse than inflation. Inflation devalues your savings, thus encouraging (forcing) you to go out there are do more work to earn more money (generate more productivity). Deflation increases the value of your savings, thus discouraging you from working - why bother doing something productive when the money you have stuffed under your mattress is increasing in value enough to pay for your living expenses?
Yes, a stable currency is best.
Currencies are stable when the money supply expands at about the same rate as the productivity of the country's citizens (basically GDP - a combination of population growth and increased productivity due to technological advances). That causes prices to remain stable when measured in the currency. Ideally, a government with a fiat currency moderates their money supply to slightly exceed this productivity growth rate, which causes a slight amount of inflation (prices slowly climb). Yes it's true that when a government screws things up (e.g. Venezuela right now), it can cause massive problems. But like regular oil changes for your car, there's a huge incentive for all governments to maintain their own economy.
I think that a stable is preferable from a standpoint of conducting business. Much easier that way.
The whole reason we abandoned the gold standard is that it's really stupid to base your economy's health on the gamble that the amount of gold miners dug out of the ground each year would match the rate of growth of your country's GDP.
Here's where you go off the rails. A gold standard is simply a means of measuring value. The buying power of gold (it's value) is very stable precisely because it's supply isn't subject to sudden increases or decreases, it can't be destroyed, can't be forged, can't be manipulated, etc. The amount dug out of the ground doesn't need to match GDP growth, nor does the amount of gold in circulation have to match the value of products traded in the world. It's just a unit of measure, like a meter. If the price of gold goes up, it's not gold that changed, it's the dollar. That means there are too many dollars and we need to stop printing. If the price goes down, again, it's not gold. That means there are too few dollars and we need to print more. Look at the historic buying power of an ounce of gold, very stable. Look at the historic *price* of gold, what you are seeing is the fluctuating buying power of the dollar in real value -- gold value.
Historically, the amount of gold mined each year did not keep pace with economic growth, resulting in deflation, which led to higher economic instability. If you look at the history of recessions in the U.S., in the 45 years since 1971 when we went off the gold standard, there have been 6 recessions, or 1 per 7.5 years. In the 45 years prior (1926-1971) there were 9 recessions, or 1 per 5 years. The 50 years before that (1875-1925) saw 13 recessions, or 1 per 3.8 years. And the 50 years before that (1825-1875) saw 13 recessions as well. The amount of economic contraction during recessions has also been smaller since we went off the gold standard.
We went off the gold standard because Nixon wanted to manipulate our currency to weaken it for trade purposes. It lasted long enough to get him reelected and we had a crash shortly after.
Unfortunately, bitcoin perpetuates this stupidity. Its value is based on (1) the rate at which people are able to "mine" bitcoins by solving increasingly difficult math problems, and (2) its total supply is capped at about 21 million coins. The very fact that bitcoins are appreciating in value is evidence that it's a terrible choice of a currency. You want the prices of staple goods to remain relatively stable in a currency. Instead, bitcoins are so deflationary that early adopters are lite
The national debt will go down proportionately.
There are so many predictive "if .... then .... " statements in this article, id like to hire the author to help debug my code.
Just based on all the bitcoin mining operations having moved to China with cheaper costs there, this appears to be an attempt to get bitcoin in the news to pump up the price. With Trump being anti-China regarding trade and foreign relations, Chinese exports will find less demand, impacting their economy and reducing their GDP, which may cause the Chinese government to influence bitcoin, making the currency less valuable due to manipulation. Propaganda like this article wants to avoid that scenario, with happy dreams of bitcoin as a global currency that can not be manipulated.
This story is total speculation, nothing of substance to back it up. One wild man's opinion.
This does not belong on a site that claims, "news for nerds, stuff that matters"
eom
That value was proof in a low-information-velocity economy. Prior to the discovery of electromagnetism and its technology, there was no easy way to guarantee monetary payment over distances. I.e. payee didn't know for sure that payor was good for the money. In some limited areas where such thing could be checked and punishment made if found to be false (e.g. in a city or small political entity with reliable enforcement), you might be able to get away with more but in general, gold was the most effective and reliable transfer of that information.
That central advantage outweighed the other problems. And before the 19th century, economic growth rates were low all over the planet.
Today, electronic funds transfers can give notice of insufficient funds either immediately or with short notice, so the prime technological argument for gold is no longer applicable, and the monetary disadvantages are central.
The unsuitability of bitcoin as a currency for general economic use is the primary reason for its spontaneous popularity. Almost everybody who wants some is speculating on the possibility of instability in the 'shortage' direction. There is no bond market in bitcoin.
The other primary use case for bitcoin is of course enabling criminality---a means of clandestine monetary exchange outside the standard payment systems and their regulation.
My dick could hit more than 9 inches in 2017 driven by expectations that Trump will deliver a steady stream of hot women to my doorstep.
Or...uhhh...not...
Just for comparison... What is the value of all the Gold in the world? $7,024,689,650,351 Yep - That's trillions Based on current spot gold price of $1,174.62 http://onlygold.com/Info/All-T... How many Bitcoins are currently in circulation? 15,873,063 BTC (as of October 4th 2016) Note that there’s a cap of 21,000,000 — there won’t ever be more than that! https://www.quora.com/How-many... So, value at $2000 per Bc is about $42 Billions U.S. GDP is about about $18 Trillions U.S. Federal Debt is about $20 Trillions
And it has nothing to do with the 8 TRILLION dollars Obama added to the national debt.
In my understanding, Bitcoin is nothing more, nothing less than a Pyramid Scam system, and a self-limited and volatile one. Also, to make things even worse, the Bitcoin is a closed system, meaning that only exists a total amount of possible money that can be generated, and the only way to make it gain more value is to try to do nasty things like "market speculation"... things that will only help to create an "I-will-explode-soon" kind of market bubble, and (if you think it cannot be worse) inside a "glass ceiling". Also, from the start of its creation, all the big slots already had an owner, leaving only the little ones to "the rest of us" to try mining...
But the worst part is the amount of people encouraging this "system". The ones participating are already trapped in this scam and cannot leave without loosing everything invested (or try to sell to other people and helps perpetuate this insanity).
But, some day, when all this abomination "magically" disappears in thin air, everyone in it will loose all their "money" and (eventually) will cry a lot... but it will be too late :(
Umm... please enlighten me what effective new strategies The Fed used to fix our last economic crisis?
One of the techniques they DID try was Section 128 of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, allowing the Federal Reserve to pay interest on “excess reserves” that U.S. banks park at the Fed. This allowed banks to just send their money in to The Fed and earn money on it, rather than loan any of it to actual customers who needed loans. In other words, great for the banks themselves but screwed over the general public.
Or how about the government debt carry trade, where The Fed lends gigantic piles of nearly interest-free cash to the big Wall Street banks, and in turn those banks use the money to buy up huge amounts of government debt?
Oh yeah, this stuff made Ben Bernanke a real American hero.....
I say that if we had a gold standard then there is neither inflation nor deflation. Gold is the unit of measure, it's a reference. If the price of 1oz of Gold changes, then dollars should be added or removed to return to where it was. There would be no incentive to buy gold with dollars because it's value does not change relative to the dollar. Tacking the dollar to gold is not a way to back the currency up so that people can get gold when the dollar fails, it's a way to keep the value of the dollar stable over time, because the buying power of an ounce of gold is pretty stable historically. Thus, the fact that the value of the world's gold is less than the value of the world's stuff is not really an issue since gold is just a stable reference value.
As for deflation decreasing incentive to work, why? If the currency was gaining value wouldn't you want to get more of it? Still, I think most people would prefer a stable dollar over one that's either going through inflation or deflation.