Bitcoin Series 7: How is bitcoin a store of value?

Part I: Background

When considering if bitcoin is a store of value, please consider the following as background:

-          Bitcoin is infinitely, instantly transportable anywhere on the planet in a matter of seconds

-          By the end of 2014, there will be hundreds of thousands of merchants who will accept bitcoin for payment.    Bitpay already has 15,000 merchants and through Gyft one can access a few thousand other retailers.

-       There are exchanges that would convert bitcoins to a major currency of your choice.

In other words, there is a network.   Hint: this will be important later.

Part II: "Features"

With that background, now let's work backwards to how it can be a store of value. I think there four main elements that drive bitcoin’s utility to someone in the short-term as a store of value.

(a)    Non-confiscatable:

When properly handled, it is the least confiscatable asset known to man.    With some digits printed on a tiny slip of paper, one can control and transfer hundreds of millions of dollars anywhere in the world.    In an even more extreme example, one could actually memorize a passphrase and control one’s bitcoins with nothing more than one’s memory.

Bank accounts can be seized.   And so can real property, gold bars and fine art.    There is no realistic way to confiscate a fully secured bitcoin wallet short of torturing the owner to death for access to the private key.   And, with a few minutes of warning, bitcoins can be moved anywhere in the world avoiding even that risk. 

(b)  Portable / Liquid / Fungible / Divisible


Not a single other asset classes outside of currency is as portable / liquid / fungible / divisible as bitcoin.

Stocks, bonds, VC investments, private equity investments, real estate, timber, commodities, diamonds, gold, silver, fine art and the whole pantheon of the investment world all are less liquid than bitcoin.
 

(c)    Correlation


Bitcoin is an asset with limited correlation with other established asset classes.    As everyone learned in their Intro to Finance class, non-correlated asset classes add value to a portfolio.

(d) Disaster insurance


Bitcoin would be particularly useful in the event of a localized or personalized financial disaster.   If you are a rich Argentinean, it is likely that your local cash, real estate, stocks and business investments will tank at the same time.   If you think someday the US/Euro-zone are headed for disaster (I don’t but some do), then you might want to have some digital currency that will likely appreciate in that scenario.  

If somehow you have a personal financial disaster and have your financial assets frozen, it might not be bad to have a small pool of value that isn't blocked that can pay for your lunch the next day.

Part III: Users (as store of value)

Now, with those four characteristics, can we imagine some people who would want to keep some money in bitcoin?  

(a)    A corrupt oil minister taking bribes might consider having 30-50% of assets in bitcoin.   If he has to make a run for it to Switzerland, it is the safest way to take his money with him

(b)   A businessman in a volatile country where he faces political, personal or economic risk (of which there are dozens) might consider 10% of assets in bitcoin

(c)    A wealthy individual in a developed country might consider 2%-3% in bitcoin or related assets as long-term ‘disaster’ insurance.   If everything goes wrong (nationally or personally), it might not be bad to have some portable, hard-to-confiscate liquid assets

(d)   A family office, endowment, pension fund or so might consider a <1% to 3% allocation to bitcoin (or a basket of digital currencies) for speculative or diversification purposes (noting that this is highly speculative).

A middle class individual in Indiana will probably be the last person to have any money in bitcoin-as-a-store-of-value.   That is OK and appropriate.   They almost certainly have better risk-reward bets they can make with their money like paying down their credit cards.

The current state (for context) is that there are ~$63T of investable assets in the world and ~$30T of M1 global currency money supply.  Bitcoin represents 0.015% (1 / 6666th) of the former and 0.031% (1 / 3200th) of the the latter right now.   

Part IV: Conclusions

This is the part that people will ask: "But what prevents it from going to zero if people stop using it?"

Well, nothing.  If people stop using bitcoin, its intrinsic value is zero.   Its value is 100% derived by the fact that it is a network (aka other people and other businesses will accept bitcoin) and once you have that network, then it generates the exciting "Features" mentioned earlier which will support some level of demand for it. 

It is the same reason ebay, craigslist, twitter, and the fax machine have value.    In a world of one fax machine, it would be a worthless piece of metal.    In a world of 1 user, bitcoin would be worthless.

And as we previously discussed in the intrinsic value, the 'network' effect is also what supports the price of gold, stamps, mined diamonds and so on.    All of them trade permanently far above their 'intrinsic value' as a product if they were not accepted as a form of wealth.

For the full bitcoin series: ledracapital.com/bitcoin
Twitter: @polemitis and @ledracapital
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Posted on December 28, 2013 and filed under Bitcoin.

Bitcoin Series 6: Intrinsic value - it is not that simple

One of the most frustrating discussions about bitcoin is the concept that it has no ‘intrinsic value’.  

First of all, that characterization is itself inaccurate when it comes to bitcoin.   A natively digital fungible transportable secure currency that millions of people accept has value has intrinsic value.

The naysayers would say “but this concept that it has value is itself a bubble, a delusion, it must return to its ‘instrinsic’ value that can't include the fact that people think it has value so it will go to $0.”

If that is the case, how does one explain the following?

-          A rare stamp has almost no intrinsic value (you can’t even mail a letter with it and they are hardly beautiful works of art), but if someone wants to give me a Penny Black, I am 100% certain that someone would pay me thousands of dollars for it

-          Lab diamonds are functionally equivalent to mined diamonds and a lot cheaper.    Yet, somehow that has had almost no impact on the price of mined diamonds

-          Gold has traded above its ‘intrinsic’ industrial value for thousands of years

If something gets established as a store of value it can trade above its ‘intrinsic’ value on a permanent basis based on the fact that other people will accept it.     So, while it is still undetermined that bitcoin will be accepted as store of value, there is no theoretical reason why an arbitrarily scarce asset (aka the Penny Black or gold or bitcoin) can’t accrue permanent market value.

In this regard, bitcoin has significant advantages over the examples above.   I can’t arbitrarily divide a diamond and send it instantly to India or buy, say, web hosting services with it.   I can do that with bitcoin.

For the full bitcoin series: ledracapital.com/bitcoin
Twitter: @polemitis and @ledracapital
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Posted on December 28, 2013 and filed under Bitcoin.

Bitcoin Series 5: What are the elements of valuing bitcoin?

Valuing bitcoin is a complicated exercise because there is no clear valuation method that has been accepted.  

I am not going to attempt to value it here, but I will present some initial thoughts regarding what will drive demand for bitcoins and, therefore their value:

(a)    “Velocity of money”  - how much money is tied up in bitcoin while transactions are being made.

(b)   “Laziness” – A lot of people or businesses that decide to use bitcoin will keep some (small) amounts of money in bitcoin just for convenience.   I certainly did not login to Paypal every time someone sent me money to move it to my bank account and this same logic will apply here.

(c)    “Fun/speculation” – People spend $40 billion annually gambling in Macau and $10 billion annually gambling in Las Vegas.   Day-trading and speculation in bitcoin, something that can be done 24 /7 / 365 from any PC, is not going to go away.

(d)   “Diversification / store of value / disaster planning”:  This is discussed in detail in the ‘Store of Value’ post.   It is perfectly rational for people in certain situations to keep some percentage of their assets in bitcoin.

(e)   “Native bitcoin” – There will be classes of activities (aka machine-based economic transactions) that will be natively in bitcoin and will stay permanently in the bitcoin ecosystem.   These will increase over time.

Demand for bitcoin will be (a)+(b)+(c)+(d)+(e).    How quickly each of these areas develop is really a matter of psychology and regulatory approaches rather than hard finance.   We will delve into the potential for each area later.

For the full bitcoin series: ledracapital.com/bitcoin
Twitter: @polemitis and @ledracapital
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Posted on December 28, 2013 and filed under Bitcoin.

Bitcoin Series 4: . Is bitcoin a currency or an asset?

One genuinely difficult question is whether bitcoin is a currency or an asset. 

Bitcoin has several characteristics that are commonly associated with currencies:

-          It is almost infinitely divisible

-          It is fungible

-          It is remarkably portable (more portable than any asset or currency to date)

-          It is liquid (can be converted to traditional currencies 24/7/365 on one of several exchanges)

Despite that, my conclusion is that it is simpler in a variety of ways to consider bitcoin an asset for now for regulatory purposes. Once this characteristic is accepted then a lot of ‘issues’ with bitcoin start to fade.  

-          Bitcoin is hardly the only volatile asset class nor does it have to take on the burden of being the bearer of monetary policy or the unit of account the way national currencies do. 

Nobody has said ‘derivatives in IBM stock aren’t going to succeed because it won’t be practical to price Club Monaco sweaters in them’

-          Furthermore tax treatments become clearer.   Gains from buying and selling on an investment basis will be short-term or long-term capital gains depending on the holding period.    Gains from running a trading operation will be ordinary income.

Over a period of many years and in a narrow context, one might consider scenarios where bitcoin acts as a full-blown national currency.   But that is not today's problem nor is it necessary for bitcoin to be a success.

For the full bitcoin series: ledracapital.com/bitcoin
Twitter: @polemitis and @ledracapital
Ledra Bitcoin Digest email newsletter: ledracapital.com/subscribe

Posted on December 28, 2013 and filed under Bitcoin.