I’m a gold bull and a dollar bear. But I don’t agree with the notion popular among my fellow gold bugs that Bitcoin is a Ponzi scheme. Bitcoin may continue soaring or it may crash and burn, but there’s no Ponzi figure telling investors that their funds are being used to create returns.
I’m also a staunch advocate for free markets. I think there should be a separation of economy and state, for similar reasons to those that make the separation of church and state a good idea.
Ideologically, I love Robert Breedlove’s vision of a future in which the state is driven entirely out of the money business, as he outlined in our recent interview.
As a libertarian with an Austrian view of economics, it doesn’t matter to me if it’s gold, cigarettes, Bitcoin, or anything else we use as money. It matters only that it’s honest money. By that I mean that its value is beyond the reach of lying politicians and their bureaucratic henchmen, as well as private-sector counterfeiters.
I have to cheer the advent of cryptocurrencies as a market response to the state’s gross mismanagement of—and destructive interference with—economies in general and money specifically.
I support the development and adoption of any and all new forms of non-government money.
And I’m happy to let the market decide which forms—old and new alike—are best.
As a speculator, however, it’s not my problem to say what Bitcoin is, can, or should be worth; I need to decide whether I’m likely to make money buying now.
Nothing Robert told me convinced me that Bitcoin must go higher soon. Given his long-term vision, he doesn’t need to care. He’s not a speculator, like me. He’s advocating Bitcoin on the basis of free-market economics. He’s buying because he wants to see non-government money triumph. He sees it as long-term savings for a future in which he thinks Bitcoin will be the market’s top—if not only—choice for money.
That doesn’t mean he thinks Bitcoin can only go up, of course. I give Robert credit for agreeing that state hostility to Bitcoin and other cryptos could hammer their prices for some time. Given the increasing chatter among government officials about Bitcoin being used primarily by criminals, I see this as highly likely. And that suggests to me that even if Bitcoin does soar higher this year, prices will likely crash much lower before the dust settles.
Believing that the state will ultimately fail in its attempts to kill cryptos, long-term HODLers may not care that piling into Bitcoin now could result in massive capital losses for years—but I do.
As the market saying goes: Being in too early can be the same as being wrong.
Further, I’m a disciplined speculator, not a gambler. I’m not looking to add anything to my portfolio just because it might go through the roof. I have to consider risk as well.
Specifically, I’m looking for great speculations that offer high returns with a high probability of success—at least 50% or better.
As an individual, I don’t place too much priority on how speedy my returns are. The longer I have to wait for payday, the more certain I need to be of that payday, but I’m willing to wait.
As a newsletter writer whose guidance a lot of people depend upon, it’s different. I’m looking for great speculations that can deliver within a timeframe that works for most of my clients. That’s usually within a couple years—not decades.
So, does Bitcoin qualify?
Here are the pros and cons I see for near- to mid-term capital allocation to Bitcoin.
PROS:
CONS:
Where does this leave me?
Well, I see the upside in the pros, but there’s huge downside in the cons—which range from utterly unpredictable to highly likely.
In my view, this makes buying Bitcoin now a high-risk gamble, not a rational speculation.
Other Thoughts
I have to say that I’m not convinced of Robert’s argument that Mises’ regression theorem applies to Bitcoin. Commodity money has much more than a historical use case; the metals are still in use and consumed today.
Bitcoin doesn’t have a solid use case that I can see, other than the circular argument of it being good for use as money because it’s good for use as money. I grant, however, that this may change. As we progress further into the Information Age, I can see things developing in such a way that one must have Bitcoin (or something like it) to pay for certain goods and services that have widespread demand.
When our civilization becomes interplanetary, for instance, transporting commodity money between planets would be very expensive. I can well imagine a time when no sane Mars colonist would accept payment in the form of notes for metals stored on Earth.
I can imagine this… but such a distant future doesn’t make me want to rush online and buy Bitcoin today.
There’s also the question of what happens if desperate governments faced with an existential threat pull the plug on the internet to try to stop Bitcoin. I don’t think this is realistic. Destroying e-commerce seems likely to be just as suicidal for them. It seems more likely to me that governments will mandate state-built internets that help them monitor people’s financial activity. Robert points out that as long as just one copy of the massively distributed ledger system survives, Bitcoin is back as soon as the world starts connecting again. But for Bitcoin to be used as money in such a scenario, a lot of people would have to be willing to break the law and risk getting caught.
To me, this highlights a negative for Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency as money. Call it… systemic risk.
I like owning gold because it’s a physical store of value I can hold in my hand. There’s no counterparty risk. It’s a long for which there is no short. It’s an asset I could exchange for other values even if civilization collapsed and reverted to a Dark Age (as has happened before).
Bitcoin may have no counterparty risk, but it does expose me to systemic risks, ranging from the code I use to transact in it to the internet itself.
And that’s just today. In the future, the possibility of quantum computing or even more advanced technologies could break the currently stipulated invulnerability of cryptocurrencies.
I don’t expect this to be a real concern for many years. But it does seem relevant for those who dismiss the ups and downs in the years ahead because they expect Bitcoin to prevail at the end of the day. If Bitcoin is no longer secure when that end day comes, all the years of HODLing will be for nothing.
I don’t want to spend too much time on fanciful or philosophical debates, but I do want to share these thoughts, as I’m aware that many readers are concerned with more than the near-term potential of Bitcoin.
Here’s my bottom line for the big picture…
I don’t feel a need to guess, assume, or gamble on what form of money will be used in the future because I expect to be able to earn whatever is used for money in the future.
In contrast, I have no problem understanding the value of gold and believing in its longevity, so I’m willing to realize long-term savings in physical gold bullion.
This does not mean that I’m anti-Bitcoin.
I think it’s incorrect to call Bitcoin a scam. That would imply that it was created for the purpose of defrauding people, which I don’t think is true.
And, as above, I can imagine use cases developing that give Bitcoin a more concrete connection to people’s needs. I have no problem at all with a future in which Bitcoin and gold both serve as money.
We’re witnessing a fascinating battle between decentralized market forces and the coercive power of the state over the future of money. I’m rooting for free-market money. May the world’s pathetic, dishonest fiat currencies return to the hell from which they came.
But, as a disciplined speculator, I choose to watch this historic struggle from a safe distance.
Key Takeaways
In short, I’m not confident enough in Bitcoin’s success to put a significant amount of my wealth into it today. But I can foresee circumstances under which I would.
That’s my take,
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