neděle 28. ledna 2018

Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin will displace banks

It's a common motivation for Bitcoin fans, or more generally, crypto fans, that it will displace banks. The idea is that when you have a mean of sending money without the middle man, the middle man will inevitably go bankrupt.

That idea has two big flaws:

1) Banks don't run on transaction fees.

It would work if the middle man's main income was the transfer services. That's not the case. If you look at most commercial banks' sources of income, it's mostly lending. Other is assets management and own capital markets operations. This is for Deutsche Bank:


As you see, service charges, where transactions fee belong, are just 10 %. Other major source of income for banks in small countries with own national currency is forex.

In the case when cryptocurrency technology would replace fiat system, the banks would simply adjust to that: They would lend other currency. It would loose 10 % of income,  but perhaps gain more on additional services like security support, since almost all today's cryptocurrencies suffer from terrible security problems at both users side (wallet stolen, phone hacked, phishing) and services side (it's not a month without a news about a hacked exchange; it's just a matter of time until any crypto exchange is hacked).

Anyway - will they loose the 10 % at all? There's no free lunch, so who pays for the transfer? Of course - you do. And to whom? Maybe it would be banks, again:

2) Bitcoin also has a middle man

Bitcoin is not some magical perpetum mobile that would reduce the cost of financial transactions to 0. Ok, the network is processing the transactions transparently, you don't need to log into your bank to send Bitcoin. Still - there is a middle man. It's the miner that creates the block with your transaction. It is not a bank. Yet. But why would not a big mining company want to become a bank, too? It has the knowledge, it has the bandwidth, the brand, and it has Bitcoins, from its operations. Wouldn't the next logical step be to start building the whole bank services stack around it?

And taken from the other side: If a bank would run a whole stack of services, why wouldn't it start it's own mining pool? There could be a whole new marketing around it: Join BofA mining pool, get 5 % off from services. Or: The banks could compute from their (VIP) clients' transactions only to get them processed fast. This is actually quite likely with Bitcoin because of how terrible the design is for actually adopting it as a daily payment vehicle.

If you're lucky, you can get the transactions done for free (without a fee). That's going to change, too: Again, there's no free lunch, and you pay the miners for processing your transaction through automatically newly generated Bitcoins (Yay! Money printing! Didn't they want to get rid of that?), so that's where the capital is flowing from the newly buying people. This mechanism is being reduced over time and in the end, you'll cover their expenses in transaction fees.

Unless they are not just miners. If they are banks with mining, they will be able to process your transactions on their own. And if they are not?

The effect of the Lightning Network

Currently, the cryptocurrency world is re-inventing the wheel with open peer accounts, this time called "Lightning Network". In short - instead of paying for each transaction, you send some amount of currency in advance, but only half-way. Then you verify part by part that the amount belongs to the other side. When either of you wants to finish the deal, the money are split and send back to the original and target addresses. Sounds good.

Until you realize that if you are in financial contanct with 50 people, you would need to keep 50 open peer accounts and hold your money locked in it.

What would be more natural than to aggregate this under some service and let them be the peer? Such service would hold your money for you, and have the peer account opened instead of you, so you wouldn't have to keep your money in it. When you instruct the service to send the money, they would simply deduct that amount of money from your account and send it to their joint peer open account. They would take just a little fee from you.

Oh, wait a second... such services exists! They are called... banks.

The banks are not going anywhere

Banks have many roles - ranging from lending and managing loans over distributing the physical currency to currency exchange to asset management to distributing dividends.

It's very naive to think that bank-like institutions will disappear just because the technical means of how the money are transferred will change. Nowadays, banks are not even the institutions facilitating the whole transfer anymore - they use SWIFT and few other systems (Ripple wanted to be one such by the way). They  serve Visa and MasterCard and Paypal. Banks don't really care whether they will send the money over this or that network. Cryptocurrency network would only become one mean of transport.

There will be banks. Mostly they will be the same we see today. If the money transfering means will change, some banks might fail to adapt, and some will arise from the technology world. But the dream of Andreas Antonopouloses of the world will not come true.

"Bitcoin propaganda" series index

Facing the same false arguments in bitcoin discussions, I've written a little series, debunking the Bitcoin myths and the Bitcoin propaganda.


To be written:
  • Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin is a storage of value
  • Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin is liquid
  • Bitcoin propaganda: People in Venezuela are paying with Bitcoin
  • Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin is deflationary currency
  • Bitcoin propaganda: With Bitcoin, we won't pay taxes
  • Bitcoin propaganda: Electricity consumed per transaction by existing banking system is bigger than Bitcoin's
  • Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin is a good store of value
  • Bitcoin propaganda: Fiat currency is not backed by anything, just like Bitcoin

středa 3. ledna 2018

Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin is like gold

The original Bitcoin propaganda was that it's the new money - the currency of the digital age. This used to be possible on a very small scale - buying pizzas from your friend and drugs and guns on dark web. But once the speculative bubble started and everyone is moving funds to and from exchanges, the network got clogged and the fees rised to the level which no more allows using it as money.  Currently, you have to pay an equivalent of around $10 to get your transaction processed within hours. If you pay less, the transaction will likely stay in the network for 14 days and then it will be canceled. If you want your transaction to happen at all, you need to check the current transaction queue and the common fee level, and then hope that you have set a fee high enough to be picked by some "miner" (which, of course, sort the transactions by fee, not by time).

The Bitcoin propaganda narrative had to change to "Bitcoin is the new gold". That is an idea that can be dismissed even more easily than "Bitcoin is the new money". For the main reason, scroll down. But before that, let's get some facts:

Gold is an element. It has unique chemical features that make it an ideal material for many applications. It does not corrode. It is highly conductive. It does not give rise to allergic reactions.

All these qualities ensure natural demand for gold. About 50 % of gold mined yearly is consumed by jewelery industry. About 12 % is used by other industry.

Demand for golden jewelery is worldwide. It has very strong tradition in Arabic countries as well as India, where wealth is traditionally stored in gold, which is preferred over banks. It is also one of ways to launder money - golden jewels worn on your body are free from import tax when crossing borders.

A common misconception is that people use gold as jewels because it is precious, not the other way around. It's a kind of chicken and egg problem, but can be cat simply: Uranium is even more expensive, but still people don't use it for jewelery. Gold got expensive because of it's features, not the other way around.

Productivity of gold mines decrease rapidly over time. The ore to gold ratio is around hundred times lower than 120 years ago. Despite of that, world production is increasing (due to more effective mining and mining as a side product of mining of other metals).

Bitcoin is not like gold. Bitcoin is a chain of data. It has no other usage than transactions. It is not unique - anyone can start different chain of numbers, and people do - that gives rise to forks or other cryptocurrencies. With every fork, the number of tokens which "are like digital gold" duplicates, dividing the capital put to the original chain. This is covered in another post.


There is almost no natural demand for Bitcoin - most of the demand nowadays is just speculative. People only buy it because they expect to sell it later. There is very little transactions that serve business - most of them are transfers of speculative capital to and from the exchanges, substantial part are spam transactions whose purposes is to either rise the transaction fees or harm competitive chain (e.g. BTC vs BCH).

Once the speculative demand stops, there will not be much demand left. Just the opposite - most people who bought for speculation will decide to sell. There will suddenly be a huge drop in price, making many, especially the rational speculators, sell, which will drop the price even more.

With gold, since over 60 % of yearly mined amount is bought even without speculative demand (including bank reserves), there will most likely be someone who will buy at some price level - and that price level is the around the costs of mining. Because the natural demand can later be covered from these reserves bought cheaply.

But since there is no natural demand for Bitcoin, and the costs of mining can fall back to very low level (because the complexity of mining computations adapts to the current requirements), there is nothing to stop it from falling to the price levels supported by the low natural demand, which is a) money laundering, b) way of exporting capital from restricted financial systems like China or Venezuela, c) currency for illegal transactions on dark web.

And lastly, the process nicknamed "mining" has one substantial economic difference from gold: Trading gold doesn't require mining of gold. If all mines in the world were shut down today, gold would be traded on. But that's different with Bitcoin: Mining facilitates the transactions. But currently, mining is very expensive. The costs of Bitcoin mining are, by design, driven by the price of Bitcoin. And this eats a lot of the capital put in Bitcoin. If everyone stopped buying Bitcoin and people would start using it for trading, the mining would still be needed, and it would continue to eat a significant amount of the capital in the network. To cover the mining expenses, miners would have to rise the transaction fees, or to sell Bitcoin if they would have some - which would drive the price down. This, by the way, makes Bitcoin ineligible as a store of value - that is covered in another post.

All these differences make Bitcoin impossible to become a gold-like asset or even replace gold as a reserve asset.

And now the simplest but strongest reason, promised at the beginning: Unlike Bitcoin, gold is a real storage of value: States emit gold coins, bars and plaquettes, which have a denoted nominal value. The value of this gold will never drop under this nominal value - because the states guarantee by law to convert these coins to the state currency. Right, this nominal value is several times (currently around 6 times) lower than the spot price. But Bitcoin has nothing.

DISCLAIMER:

The author of this post keeps some cryptocurrencies, is not involved in any cryptocurrency related bussiness, does not have any short or long positions, does not hate technology or progress. The honest purpose of this post is to provide some commons sense view on the cryptocurrency market and give people a chance to consider before loosing their money.
 
All information in this post can be found on independent sources. For your own good, don't read the bitcoin propagandistic sites only. Their purpose is to feed the bubble and they are funded by speculators who bought large amounts Bitcoin before you did. The sources will be added when time allows, but the tips are: Wikipedia, Investopedia.com, Bloomberg.com. Sites suspected to be secretly and not obviously invested in Bitcoin or funded by Bitcoin speculators are MarketWatch.com, CNBC.com. Blogging sites like Medium.com and this one, of course, provide the whole spectrum of views.

pátek 29. prosince 2017

Bitcoin propaganda: "Market cap" is larger than XY

Market capitalization is a term coming from stock markets. It's simply the current share price times number of shares which make up the company.

For instance: If Google trades at $1000 and there are 693 mil. shares, Google is said to have market capitalization of $693 bn.

Same with Bitcoin: There are 21m Bitcoins, or around 17m, depends on what you count. So Bitcoin is said to have a market capitalization of $336 billions.

Now imagine you sell a matchstick to someone for three dollars. There are 500 billions of matches in the world. From the logic of Bitcoin, the market capitalization of matches is $1500 billions.

With companies, the market capitalization makes some sense - in normal situation, i.e.  when there is no mania about some particular stock title (like with Amazon nowadays) or sector (like with internet startups stocks in 1999). In such normal situation, the value is derived from the history of earnings deliveries and hard data like number of users, estimated earnings growth (based on subscriptions, pre-orders or projected sales growth), debt, cash reserves, assets and so on. Very often, such market capitalization oscillates around  12 to 25 years of return on investment.


With Bitcoin, that number can't be calculated. Bitcoin does not have any assets,  earnings. That is important, because that sets the price free of any anchor which could guide the buyers on what price it is rational to buy at. As a substitute for such guidance, various crazy comparisons are pushed by Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin as a substitute for gold (which is nonsense, see the other post), Bitcoin as a substitute for dollar, Bitcoin as 1 % of world wealth (betting on a silly idea that everyone will put 1 % of their wealth to Bitcoin for some reason), ... some simply just shoot some random high number with some "shocking" statement, like John McAffee that Bitcoin will be worth $500,000, otherwise he will "eat his dick on national television". Which, for some, is enough guarantee to go buy Bitcoin.

If someone started selling shares of a successful company like Google, the price would probably never drop under certain level, probably around 8 years of return on investment. Even under very hard financial circumstances, there would always be someone who would buy such obvious sell-off (and later get much richer). This is called liquidity.

Bitcoin has almost no liquidity. Liquidity does not mean that you can go sell it now (although Bitcoin has problems there even in normal situation). Liquidity means that the asset can be sold in substantial amount in short time without affecting it's price. With Bitcoin, it's the opposite: If a single large holder decides to sell all of it, the price drops very quickly. One reason is that the demand is not that large afterall, and many of the buy orders at the exchanges are provenly fake (their purpose is to pump the price up). Other reason is that selling would happen at one exchange, and the arbitrage doesn't still work well for cryptocurrencies - which leads to amplified rises and drops of the exchange ratio that do not reflect the amount of the capital moved in or out.

Bitcoin price not represent a price that everyone who uses it (or better said, holds it) would buy it for. Due to a limited supply, the "hodl" culture and demand waves mainly from notoriously bad asian retail investors (i.e. small amateur investors), the price is simply the price that the last fool was willing to pay.

Bitcoin was designed for this to happen, and includes a great feature to give no limit to such retail investing bubble: Divisibility. Nobody really uses the amout of 1 Bitcoin. Instead, fractions of that can be transferred or exchanged. This makes it possible to buy e.g. 0.01 Bitcoin, which is ideal for a bubble asset, because you can take any small amout of real money and buy Bitcoin for that.

Many people then follow this logic: If there is a small chance that Bitcoin will cost 30-times more in few years, I will put some small amount of money to it which I won't regret if I loose them completely, and if it works out, I will have 30 times more.

The two things above combined lead to a global demand for a semi-constant supply (currently 12.5 BTC every 10 minutes on average), which drives the price to the ridiculous levels.

Finally, this ridiculous price is multiplied with the number of Bitcoins mined so far, and you get a nonsensical number which is then presented as "value of all Bitcoins". Don't get fooled - in the future, everyone will want their money back, and expect to sell at those ridiculous prices. The fall will be even faster than the rise - and the reason why is described in another post: "Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin is a storage of value".

čtvrtek 28. prosince 2017

Bitcoin myth: Bitcoin is anonymous

Bitcoin is not anonymous. The idea that you are untraceable comes from the fact that the transactions happen between generated numeric addresses. That doesn't make it anonymous - it's called pseudonymous.

With sufficient data about where do the transaction originate, where did it go to be exchanged for real money and which bank the transfer was made to, regulatory bodies and criminal prosecution agencies are able to trace quite precisely the individuals behind the transactions.

Demonstrations of how non-anonymous Bitcoin is are arresting of several Bitcoin fraudsters who tried to hide behind complex patters of Bitcoin transactions, but eventually were found - for instance, Alexander Vinnik.

The principle is simple: The state controls most of the ways where Bitcoin can be actually spent in large amounts. If they failed to prove the origin of Bitcoin income, they would charge criminal offenses. So these organizations mostly relay the responsibility to the sender, by arming heavily with real identity documents. Those who don't aren't typically trustworthy partners to launder your money. And the worst idea is to spend your large sum little by little - you'd provide the investigators a great network of traces which would quickly lead to you.

Bitcoin myths: Bitcoin is safe

Stating that Bitcoin is safe is quite misleading.

There are different levels of safety. Bitcoin is safe in a way. The myth about Bitcoins safety comes from the algorithms used to authorize a transaction request. Strong hashing algorithms are used for that, involving long private and public keys. Therefore, it is currently impossible to compute a private key for a public key, so you can't order a transaction without having the private key.

However, the weakest point of existing financial systems never was a weak encryption. Modern banks use 2 factor authentication, which means that besides a password, you have to confirm a login or a transaction with an additional secret passed through an independent channel, typically a cell phone over GSM.

Most often, it is the user who makes the whole system vulnerable.

With Bitcoin, which completely relies on a single point of security (strong private key), once the key is leaked to anyone, your money are immediately unsafe. Even worse: It is impossible to know whether the key has leaked or not. Even worse: The only way to find out that it was leaked is when all Bitcoins are transfered to other address. And the worst: There is no way to get it back - because Bitcoin, by design, has no "revert" option.

Leaking the private key is easy: In a situation when more than half of personal computers are infected with a virus, it's foolish to assume their users will be able to safely operate with Bitcoin key. Even if you keep your disk encrypted and the key in an encrypted file, each time you perform a Bitcoin transaction, the key can be stolen by a malware.

Bitcoin enthusiasts will operate with two options: Hardware wallet, or paper wallet. Both are impractical. Hardware wallet is something you need to carry around whenever you want to perform a transaction. If you loose it, you loose your Bitcoins. To prevent loosing them, you need to have a recovery data. But if you have recovery data which can be stolen - why have a hardware wallet?

If you suspect your private key was leaked (someone has stolen your cell phone, you had a virus, ...), there is no way to revoke it. The only thing you can do is to create a new wallet with a new key and send all the Bitcoins there. But if the old wallet is where you were receiving payments, every place you distributed the old Bitcoin address to would have to get the update - which is impossible: All emails sent, all QR codes printed, all "Donate to" footers in forum posts, all address books of your regular payers.

The cases when someone's wallet was emptied are very common. I suggest you to go to any larger uncensored Bitcoin Facebook group and look for the desperate people seeking advice. The answer is always: You're screwed, all is lost.

That's not how a safe payment system works.

čtvrtek 27. července 2017

Co je tenhle blog?

Občas spáchám delší traktát na Facebooku, kde zapadne. Jako správný egoista si myslím, že moje texty mají takovou hodnotu, že stojí za to je dát i do jiné databáze než Facebook Inc.

Zde tedy budou nahodilá témata, ale obvykle nástřel budoucnosti ("já vám to říkal"), moje kontrariánské pohledy ("bitcoin failne", Uber je hajzl), propagace smysluplných cílů (kolonizace marsu, vymýcení náboženství, odklon od fosilních paliv, řešení sociální nerovnosti, budování tunelů, dálkové hromadné dopravy a infrastruktury obecně, atd.) a občasný rant na cokoliv (Zeman je pitomec, Trump je mocný pitomec, Vít Bárta je hajzl, Babiš je mocný hajzl).

Bitcoin propaganda: Bitcoin will displace banks

It's a common motivation for Bitcoin fans, or more generally, crypto fans, that it will displace banks. The idea is that when you have ...