Cryptocurrency Price Volatility and Bitcoin Store-of-value - YouTube

Channel: aantonop

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James asks, "Store of value in a volatile market."
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"My smart friend says the biggest barrier to mass adoption is price volatility,
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which limits bitcoin's usefulness as a store of value, its most convincing use case to date."
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"It is a lousy store of value if the price keeps changing."
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"Is this right? Are there other obstacles to mass adoption of bitcoin? What are they, in your opinion?"
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James, your friend may be smart, but I don't think they understand some of the basic economics at play here.
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I don't think price volatility really affects bitcoin as a store of value. Store-of-value is a long-term perspective.
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It certainly affects bitcoin's use as a medium of exchange. But as a store of value...
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If you are buying or investing in bitcoin, using it as a store of value,
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then you have a long-term perspective, certainly more than a year.
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How is bitcoin doing in the last year?
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Oh, [the price] is up by about 600%. Sure sounds like a good store-of-value to me.
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Over the last three years? Definitely a pretty good store of value.
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If you look at it over three months, probably not a good store of value, but that is not what [the term] means.
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Store of value is definitely a long-term perspective.
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The other thing about this, it is a circular argument. Volatility is an expression of [the size of the market].
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In a follow-up question, James said, "We tend to harbor an expectation that this volatility, a key obstacle to...
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bitcoin's wider success, will eventually calm down."
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"But Bitcoin's resistance to regulation is a feature, not a bug. Where will stability come from, absent regulation?"
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I think there is a broad misunderstanding about how volatility is dealt with in markets.
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The idea that regulators control volatility in currencies, I think, is an illusion. Regulation doesn't control volatility.
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If anything, regulated markets that don't have enough flexibility and liquidity are more volatile.
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I would say the biggest contributor to volatility is the small size of a currency [market].
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You have to understand that bitcoin is currently traded on a global basis, unlike most national currencies...
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that have primarily domestic markets.
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Bitcoin is a global market. For a global market, it is [still] absolutely tiny.
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$100 billion is nothing in currencies, even for a currency that is domestic, let alone for a currency traded globally.
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So this sounds like a circular argument.
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You are basically saying "the biggest barrier to mass adoption is the lack of mass adoption."
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"If only there was more mass adoption, then there would be more mass adoption."
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"The biggest barrier to bitcoin being big, is that bitcoin is small. If only bitcoin was bigger, then it could be bigger."
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That is what price volatility is [reflective of]: this currency is small.
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If the fact that it is [now] small, is a barrier to it becoming big... That is circular logic.
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As bitcoin gets bigger, the market becomes more liquid, and it is traded more and used for different purposes,
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I think that reduces volatility.
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The more companies depend on bitcoin as an input, use it for payments to contractors or providers,
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hold inventory, purchase or sell things based on bitcoin, the more the price volatility is reduced.
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Right now, it is mostly used for speculation and dealt with on a short-term basis.
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It is traded globally, in a wide open market, and as a result [the price] is quite volatile.
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Bitcoin will become less volatile as it grows; at least I hope it will. I think the economics would argue that.
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Ash asks, "Do you believe there are cartels in the crypto space?"
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"There is a lot of noise about bitcoin being manipulated and such things. What do you think?"
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'The lady doth protest too much, methinks.'
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I wasn't hearing a lot of complaints about [price manipulation] when it increased 1000% in six months.
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There wasn't much complaining about manipulation and pumping when the price was going up by a factor of ten.
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Now, when the price is going down, for obvious reasons....
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Anything that goes up by 1000% in six months is bound to have a correction.
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I had started calling for a correction last October, saying these price [movements] are unsustainable.
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I was quite roundly bashed for being a "naysayer," "a negative Nelly," and all of that.
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The point is, anything that goes up by 1000% is likely to have a correction at some point.
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If it goes up too fast, it will come down even faster.
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As traders say, "what goes up on an escalator, comes down on an elevator."
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Now, we have a lot of people [complaining] about bitcoin being manipulated by whales, by the futures market,
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by world governments trying to dump crypto holdings in order to take the market, etc.
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The truth is, looking at the broader market, it is not just bitcoin. There was a massive correction in tech stocks.
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There has been massive corrections in stock markets, in currencies, all around the world.
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There are also massive corrections happening in [other crypto-coins].
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This is, I think, a natural response to a market that [became] over-exuberant with too much excitement.
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Too many people bought bitcoin and the other cryptocurrencies.
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[They bought] not because they believed in or understood the value of the technology;
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not because they thought this technology [would] have great potential for the future.
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They thought they would get rich in a matter of months, simply by buying into a fad. That is a greater-fool theory.
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That is not a good basis to invest.
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People were asking me, "Bitcoin is $16,000. Should I buy now?"
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I told those people, "Your strategy should [probably] be based on dollar-cost averaging."
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"Figure out what [risks] you are comfortable with, and [how much you] understand the technology."
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"The more you understand [it], the more comfortable you should be about your investment decisions."
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"If you're asking me (and I'm not an investment advisor), then you shouldn't be buying this stuff."
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I don't believe there are cartels in the crypto space. Do I believe there is [price] manipulation? Sure.
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Absolutely. Do I believe there are pump-and-dump schemes, whales trying to manipulate the price,
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completely irrational buying and selling that is pushing the price around?
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Absolutely, all of that is happening. But that is not the reason the price is crashing.
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I think trying to find causation in these markets is a fool's game, like reading tea leaves...
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or predicting stock prices based on the alignment of the Zodiac.