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IPFS News Link • Bitcoin

Can Bitcoin Act as Money?

• https://www.lewrockwell.com, By Alasdair Macleod

Since 24 January, bitcoin has risen 65% and gold rose about 7% priced in US dollars. Before gold began its current successful but relatively modest leap into new high ground, there is little doubt that hedge funds and others sold down their Comex gold contracts and bought some bitcoin ETFs instead. The listing permissions for bitcoin ETFs made regulated investment possible. And attracted by the limitations of supply, an investment cohort moved in for the kill.

This raises the often debated question yet again as to whether BTC will become money, which is the long-stop argument of its supporters. For the avoidance of doubt, I approach this topic not as a goldbug insisting on an old-school argument. Defending bitcoin, Colonel Macgregor put it in a recent interview that Macleod has a vested interest as a gold bug. I maybe a gold bug, but that does not mean that I am one through bias. I try to look at all matters objectively, which is how I approach an examination of bitcoin without any bias against or in favour. But there are some factors that investors should bear in mind and that is what this posting is about.

I draw your attention to the correlation between BTC and US tech stocks, illustrated in the chart below.

I constructed the tech index by taking the weekly close of seven large-cap stocks, rebasing them all to 100 on 24 February 2020 and then taking the arithmetic average of all of them to construct an index. It is therefore a pure price index instead of the weighted by capitalisation approach. This is then compared with bitcoin's (BTC) weekly closing price, similarly rebased. Since bitcoin has far higher volatility than even the tech stocks, I put them on different axes to facilitate visual comparison. The current bull markets in both tech stocks and bitcoin commenced at that same time.

1 Comments in Response to

Comment by PureTrust
Entered on:

What is practical for average people in their everyday use? You gotta have physical cash or coin Bitcoin. Perhaps a CR code hash printed on each coin or piece of paper, would be better than a written address. But you would need something like this so that when trading hands between live people, the receiver could use his phone to check if the paper or the coin was the legitimate form of the chunk of Bitcoin listed on it. Take a look at https://softnote.com/ and https://tectum.io/softnote/ to see a company trying to do this.



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