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Cryptocurrencies Tumble Even More, While One Asset Manager Proclaims 'Bitcoin is Dead' (marketwatch.com)

Cryptocurrency prices "fell sharply on Friday, as another bout of selling took digital currencies to fresh lows," reports MarketWatch, adding that Friday the price of Bitcoin "crashed through support at $3,500, falling more than 10% to a 15-month low at $3,230 on the Kraken exchange."

"What a difference a year makes," CNN Business quipped Friday, in an article headlined "Bitcoin's Epic Plunge Continues": In December 2017, bitcoin prices hit a record high of just under $20,000... Bitcoin is at a 15-month low. But prices have really gotten whacked this week, falling nearly 20% in just the past five days alone. Bitcoin isn't the only cryptocurrency getting hit either. Ripple/XRP, ethereum, stellar, litecoin and numerous other cryptocurrencies have plunged in the past week.

Little tangible news can explain or justify the current crypto carnage. One possible reason is that a pro-crypto member of the Securities and Exchange Commission warned at a conference this week that she's fighting an uphill battle trying to convince the rest of the SEC to approve more bitcoin exchange traded funds.... Nearly two-thirds of money managers surveyed by asset management firm Natixis still thought that cryptocurrencies were a bubble, the firm reported this week.

"In my opinion, bitcoin is dead," wrote the CEO of one wealth management firm with more than $32 billion in assets. It won't go quietly, but the recent precipitous drop may be the beginning of its inevitable and inexorable death spiral. Or there could be a dead cat bounce. Either way, I see bitcoin as a dead man walking. Future generations may read about bitcoin in a finance textbook as a curiosity and wonder what all the fuss was about. There are still some die-hard adherents espousing the virtues of bitcoin, desperate to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. Unfortunately for them, the end may not be pretty when it comes.

Proponents of bitcoin tend to focus on the impact of the blockchain technology that drives it, and make no mistake, blockchain is the real deal. Blockchain is fundamentally changing the way industries do business, from traditional banking to supply chain management. But just because blockchain technology is creating a new paradigm doesn't mean that bitcoin shares that same distinction.... Most cryptocurrency transactions are purely speculative. There are no real fundamentals to evaluate; bitcoin doesn't produce any products or services, hire any employees or pay any dividends. The only way profits are generated is when the owner is lucky enough to find someone else who will pay more for the thing...

The minute bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency appears to have even the slightest chance of disrupting national monetary supply, I expect regulation to be swift and decisive. The SEC has already issued guidance around cryptocurrencies that has created roadblocks to gaining the same legitimacy as traditional marketable securities... If you enjoy the thrill of making bets, I suggest you visit your favorite sports book or table game in Vegas where your odds of success are much higher.

5 of 165 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Oh my by Joce640k · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Little tangible news can explain or justify the current crypto carnage.

    Maybe it's just that people are finally starting to realize its true worth, ie. zero.

    It's not much use as a currency (unless you enjoy transaction fees and like seeing your money go down in value), it's certainly not an investment.

    Sell while you still can!

    (oh, wait, you can't... blockchains only allow a few transactions per second so you have to join a long line of sellers)

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  2. No arguments here by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They us massive amounts of electricity, they spiked the cost of graphics cards so high that they've only just now come down to the level they were at 2 1/2 years ago and they're completely impractical for purchasing anything except maybe drugs (since they're too volatile and slow for much else). Chalk it up as a failed experiment and move on.

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  3. Failed Experiment, or brilliant... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    SHA256 cracking method?

    Someone I talked to claimed that bitcoin has provided an excellent checksum collision database due to the way it works, and that said database reduces the need for brute force when attempting to create collision hashes. I don't know if this is true or not, but as both a social experiment and way to do Folding@Home style distributed crack of sha256sum, it would be a brilliant social hack and experiment all rolled into one.

  4. bitcoin is dead? by themusicgod1 · · Score: 4, Interesting
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  5. Re:Oh my by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Banks are using blockchain as a settlement mechanism for innovative payment services. But their chief motivation for this use case it to circumvent their own bloated creaking legacy payment processing systems and the months-long development cycles associated with them. So they use it as an innovation platform to develop prototypes quickly. Once they have a good idea if and how to roll out that service to all customers, they will probably integrate it with the legacy systems rather than stick to blockchain (especially something like Ripple which is under external control)

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