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

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.

But they never say a word, when poor ppls lose everything on decade old fraud called stock markets?
Cryptos has let thier fraudulent control over ppls MOney very weak but they can't have any substance evidence against cryptos that it's a fraud or is illegal by any means?
All what they can do is to fuss against it making fake warnings like this one so, old age group ppls doesn't go invest in crypto ?
I dont think anything will be able to replace gold unless they can make something synthetic in a lab 🙂

Etherium and Bitcoin both are dancing to Musks tunes so better choose something else
Bigger and better then musks tried and failed with the time musks will also learn his lessons !
Btc is here to stay and to eat all the fraudly printed money on which that fake illegal betting financial system is based upon ?
 
When it crashes massively then I will get some. Apparently when covid lockdown happened bitcoin fell to 4000 dollars.

Get rich schemes rarely work out. Only a few will make dough the rest will lose.

Before you criticise me, I have experience of crypto from 2017. Crashes can cause you to get depressed especially if have large amounts of money invested. Worse if your exchange or wallet gets hacked.
 
Down due to the Chinese govt recent ban on crypto and also the US govt suppose to announce the Crytptocurrency policy this week, which they didn't. Elon Musk also stops accepting Bitcoin as a trading currency.
 
The market is continuing its slide. In a few days it should start to rise again. What coins are you guys planning on purchasing.
 
The market is continuing its slide. In a few days it should start to rise again. What coins are you guys planning on purchasing.
It’s gone up, should’ve seen it 12 hours ago, it was the lowest in a long while. I was thinking of buying more XRP, but I think I’ll just stay with my current portfolio for now.
 
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


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I have sold $15000 worth of portfolio, Bitcoin nose dive is coming again it will go below 45k or 40k. Altcoins will follow the course.

Currently invest in Shiba and Kishu.

I have invested 20 percent of my total investment in these two. It's a gamble and sometimes it's worth taking risks.

I've invested in Shiba too thanks. Let's see what happens. Ive read some where it could it be a Dogecoin killer. People were saying Etherium will be big many years ago and am amazed at the price.
 
I've invested in Shiba too thanks. Let's see what happens. Ive read some where it could it be a Dogecoin killer. People were saying Etherium will be big many years ago and am amazed at the price.
Eth will go up for sure, it’s still very low, next year maybe we will be saying “damn should’ve gotten ETH while it was cheap”
 
This is how the market was back in 2017 and 2019. We discussed it for many months on PDF until everyone went quiet for a few years. Covid didn't help us.

2019 till mid 2020 was the best.

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When it crashes massively then I will get some. Apparently when covid lockdown happened bitcoin fell to 4000 dollars.

Get rich schemes rarely work out. Only a few will make dough the rest will lose.

Before you criticise me, I have experience of crypto from 2017. Crashes can cause you to get depressed especially if have large amounts of money invested. Worse if your exchange or wallet gets hacked.

I experienced 85% loss in 2018.

The good old days, a lot of stress.
 
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.

This means that crypto is on sale.
 

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