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Featured Cryptocurrency investors should be prepared to lose all their money, Bank of England governor says

JackTheRipper

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KEY POINTS
  • When asked about the rising value of cryptocurrencies, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said: “They have no intrinsic value.”
  • “I’m going to say this very bluntly again,” he added. “Buy them only if you’re prepared to lose all your money.”
  • The prices of digital currencies from bitcoin to dogecoin have climbed wildly this year.

106879713-1620381578303-gettyimages-1206515432-UK_BOE.jpeg

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey.
Simon Dawson | Bloomberg via Getty Images

LONDON — Cryptocurrencies “have no intrinsic value” and people who invest in them should be prepared to lose all their money, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said.

Digital currencies like bitcoin, ether and even dogecoin have been on a tear this year, reminding some investors of the 2017 crypto bubble in which bitcoin blasted toward $20,000, only to sink as low as $3,122 a year later.

Asked at a press conference Thursday about the rising value of cryptocurrencies, Bailey said: “They have no intrinsic value. That doesn’t mean to say people don’t put value on them, because they can have extrinsic value. But they have no intrinsic value.”

“I’m going to say this very bluntly again,” he added. “Buy them only if you’re prepared to lose all your money.”

Bailey’s comments echoed a similar warning from the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority.

“Investing in cryptoassets, or investments and lending linked to them, generally involves taking very high risks with investors’ money,” the financial services watchdog said in January.

“If consumers invest in these types of product, they should be prepared to lose all their money.”

Bailey, who was formerly the chief executive of the FCA, has long been a skeptic of crypto. In 2017, he warned: “If you want to invest in bitcoin, be prepared to lose all your money.”


Bitcoin is up over 90% this year, thanks in part to rising interest from institutional investors and corporate buyers such as Tesla. The electric car firm bought $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin earlier this year, and the value of its holdings have since risen to nearly $2.5 billion.

Proponents of bitcoin see it as a store of value akin to gold because of its scarce supply — only 21 million bitcoins can ever be minted — arguing that the cryptocurrency can act as a hedge against inflation as central banks around the world print money to relieve coronavirus-battered economies.

However, skeptics view bitcoin as a market bubble waiting to burst. Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at Bank of America Securities, said bitcoin’s rally looks like the “mother of all bubbles,” while Alvine Capital’s Stephen Isaacs said there are “no fundamentals with this product, period.”


Alternative digital currencies have made even larger gains than bitcoin. Ether, the native token of the Ethereum blockchain, has seen returns of more than 360% year to date, while meme-inspired crypto dogecoin is up a whopping 12,500%.

Analysts have attributed dogecoin’s rise to tweets from celebrities like Tesla’s Elon Musk and Mark Cuban, as well as retail investors buying the token on the free-trading app Robinhood. David Kimberley, an analyst at U.K. investing app Freetrade, described the dogecoin rally as “a classic example of greater fool theory at play,” referring to the practice of selling overvalued assets to investors who are willing to pay a higher price.

At the same time, central banks are considering whether to issue their own digital currencies. Last month, the Bank of England launched a joint taskforce with the Treasury aimed at exploring central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs. Such a currency would exist alongside cash and bank deposits rather than replacing them, the bank said.

 
KEY POINTS
  • When asked about the rising value of cryptocurrencies, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said: “They have no intrinsic value.”
  • “I’m going to say this very bluntly again,” he added. “Buy them only if you’re prepared to lose all your money.”
  • The prices of digital currencies from bitcoin to dogecoin have climbed wildly this year.

106879713-1620381578303-gettyimages-1206515432-UK_BOE.jpeg

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey.
Simon Dawson | Bloomberg via Getty Images

LONDON — Cryptocurrencies “have no intrinsic value” and people who invest in them should be prepared to lose all their money, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said.

Digital currencies like bitcoin, ether and even dogecoin have been on a tear this year, reminding some investors of the 2017 crypto bubble in which bitcoin blasted toward $20,000, only to sink as low as $3,122 a year later.

Asked at a press conference Thursday about the rising value of cryptocurrencies, Bailey said: “They have no intrinsic value. That doesn’t mean to say people don’t put value on them, because they can have extrinsic value. But they have no intrinsic value.”

“I’m going to say this very bluntly again,” he added. “Buy them only if you’re prepared to lose all your money.”

Bailey’s comments echoed a similar warning from the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority.

“Investing in cryptoassets, or investments and lending linked to them, generally involves taking very high risks with investors’ money,” the financial services watchdog said in January.

“If consumers invest in these types of product, they should be prepared to lose all their money.”

Bailey, who was formerly the chief executive of the FCA, has long been a skeptic of crypto. In 2017, he warned: “If you want to invest in bitcoin, be prepared to lose all your money.”


Bitcoin is up over 90% this year, thanks in part to rising interest from institutional investors and corporate buyers such as Tesla. The electric car firm bought $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin earlier this year, and the value of its holdings have since risen to nearly $2.5 billion.

Proponents of bitcoin see it as a store of value akin to gold because of its scarce supply — only 21 million bitcoins can ever be minted — arguing that the cryptocurrency can act as a hedge against inflation as central banks around the world print money to relieve coronavirus-battered economies.

However, skeptics view bitcoin as a market bubble waiting to burst. Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at Bank of America Securities, said bitcoin’s rally looks like the “mother of all bubbles,” while Alvine Capital’s Stephen Isaacs said there are “no fundamentals with this product, period.”


Alternative digital currencies have made even larger gains than bitcoin. Ether, the native token of the Ethereum blockchain, has seen returns of more than 360% year to date, while meme-inspired crypto dogecoin is up a whopping 12,500%.

Analysts have attributed dogecoin’s rise to tweets from celebrities like Tesla’s Elon Musk and Mark Cuban, as well as retail investors buying the token on the free-trading app Robinhood. David Kimberley, an analyst at U.K. investing app Freetrade, described the dogecoin rally as “a classic example of greater fool theory at play,” referring to the practice of selling overvalued assets to investors who are willing to pay a higher price.

At the same time, central banks are considering whether to issue their own digital currencies. Last month, the Bank of England launched a joint taskforce with the Treasury aimed at exploring central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs. Such a currency would exist alongside cash and bank deposits rather than replacing them, the bank said.

Etherium goes 10% up.. Sikeee...
 
Im thinking to invest 2000 riyal using binance. But i dont know jackshit of this game.
 
Bitcoin is no more than a highly speculative asset with a fundamental value of ZERO! that’s true, but no other asset has any fundamental value, either. The real world is of course not constrained by the range of possible equilibria supported by the mainstream economic theory. But Bitcoin is even riskier as an investment.
 
Like paper currency has no intrinsic value, crypto is a digital equivalent of it. The clever part is they can come up with unlimited number of them with different names. What is hilarious is that aliens like Elon musk tweets about it and the whole market wobbles. Shayateen
 
Warren buffett also said this.
It's a extremely risky investment.
Do not invest more than 5-10% of your savings or net worth here just to try new opportunity .

No, Do not invest in any cryptocurrency,
Their value can be drop at any time, sooner or later.
Most of Exchanges got hacked, even opensource apps like Electrum also got hacked (May be owner involved in it), Hardware wallets are also risky, they can be tempered.

They are only good for money laundering, not good for payment too, even like USD Coin, whose values are always stable, but money can stuck in wallets as they based on etherium network, if you want to send payment to any merchant, fee may be higher than sending/payment amount.

Etherium Network Fee 29.47 USD/tx for May 08 2021



Bitcoin Network Fee 18.60 USD/tx for May 08 2021

 
No, Do not invest in any cryptocurrency,
Their value can be drop at any time, sooner or later.
Most of Exchanges got hacked, even opensource apps like Electrum also got hacked (May be owner involved in it), Hardware wallets are also risky, they can be tempered.

They are only good for money laundering, not good for payment too, even like USD Coin, whose values are always stable, but money can stuck in wallets as they based on etherium network, if you want to send payment to any merchant, fee may be higher than sending/payment amount.

Etherium Network Fee 29.47 USD/tx for May 08 2021



Bitcoin Network Fee 18.60 USD/tx for May 08 2021

Right that bubble balloon can burst anytime .
 
Warren buffett also said this.
It's a extremely risky investment.
Do not invest more than 5-10% of your savings or net worth here just to try new opportunity .
He famously missed the tech boom.

Value investors will never get crypto currency.

Banks will always oppose them ,their deposits are drying.
 
Short term these currencies have value because people expect that at some point they'll become legitimate currency you can use to pay for goods and services. You can even today on a very small scale but ultimately those retailers are then changing/selling them for USD.

If states start using them they will gain the same legitimacy paper money has, but until then the value is based on speculation.
@Azure will have an opinion on this.
 
No, Do not invest in any cryptocurrency,
Their value can be drop at any time, sooner or later.
Most of Exchanges got hacked, even opensource apps like Electrum also got hacked (May be owner involved in it), Hardware wallets are also risky, they can be tempered.

They are only good for money laundering, not good for payment too, even like USD Coin, whose values are always stable, but money can stuck in wallets as they based on etherium network, if you want to send payment to any merchant, fee may be higher than sending/payment amount.

Etherium Network Fee 29.47 USD/tx for May 08 2021



Bitcoin Network Fee 18.60 USD/tx for May 08 2021


I wouldn't say it's a bad time at all.

Bitcoin is being employed for large scale transactions only.
Ethereum is much more broad-based.

As for normal transactioms, there are many other amazing cryptocurrency projects out there which take not even a cent per transaction and have transaction speeds of less than a minute.

There are apps coming out that will allow you to pay for items in normal stores using cryptocurrency which employ their payment machines, with a simple scan.

The bubble to burst, is not likely here yet. Bitcoin just went through a market correction and is pretty stable slowly rising, going sideways, it's a really healthy market.

Bitcoin entered bubbles in 2011, 2014, 2017... they burst, and look where the coin is now (sure, the bad coins get run to death but the good ones remain and recover). People who held onto the coin and in good projects are at big returns now.

The crypto market is at such a point, that the correction phases are showing smaller and smaller dips, and big companies have the currency on their data sheets now.

Im thinking to invest 2000 riyal using binance. But i dont know jackshit of this game.

If you're confident, it's a good time to invest, the market is in a bull run at the moment. But what I will say that as for anyone who invests, always invest that which you can afford to lose (without pain).

Reason is, it's a volatile market, things can happen, and second reason is that sometimes you just need to hold a coin and you cannot do this if a few dips cause you to sell in panic.

Follow some trust worthy crypto investor, and start with something you can afford to lose, once you invest, don't look at graphs 24/7, just go about your day.

Also, mandatory disclaimer ~this is not financial advice~
 
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If you're confident, it's a good time to invest, the market is in a bull run at the moment. But what I will say that as for anyone who invests, always invest that which you can afford to lose (without pain).

Reason is, it's a volatile market, things can happen, and second reason is that sometimes you just need to hold a coin and you cannot do this if a few dips cause you to sell in panic.

Follow some trust worthy crypto investor, and start with something you can afford to lose, once you invest, don't look at graphs 24/7, just go about your day.
I think Bitcoin and Etherium are 2 coins that we can be confident about.
 
I think Bitcoin and Etherium are 2 coins that we can be confident about.

No, there are many projects out there which have the attention of investors. The reason BTC is so much in the spotlight is because it's the mother of all coins, essentially where it started, and the rally led to value.

ETH is definitely a very good project, but apart from that there are coins in between 10 cents and a dollar whose companies have good long term goals, projects and following.
I think Bitcoin and Etherium are 2 coins that we can be confident about.

Right now the whole market is in a healthy bull run. Weekly some coins register 50% - 100% growth in value, while some also go in loss (so analysis is important to consider investment). There are regular pumps and dumps, and so on.
 

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