The volatility of Bitcoin only affects you if you have a lot of them. Let's say you have 100 BTC, and the current market price is $800. Well
then you've got $80,000 if you cash them in now. Yay you! Except you
won't be able to. No online Bitcoin Exchange will have that much money,
and if it did, it would probably crash the market if it tried to buy that many
coins off you. So your best bet is to hold on to them, right?
OK. But then what happens if someone else does do just that, and the price
of BTC plummets to, say, $50 or less? Your stash is now worth only
$5,000. Quelle Disaster!
Or is it? It depends on how much you paid for them in the first place. If you mined
them yourself, then you only need to factor in the electricity it cost you (if
you even know that in the first place), but if you bought them as an
investment, what was the price at the time and how much did you pay? If
you paid $10 a coin, then you'll always make a profit if you sell at $50. Not as much of a profit as you would have when the price was $800 of course.
And that's
the thing that keeps Bitcoin enthusiasts hoarding – the fact that with all the
fluctuations in price, the value of Bitcoin nevertheless has kept on rising. So where's the incentive to cash in your coins when you could get twice as much
in the near future? There's always the possibility that the price will
drop to a stable figure, and then remain there. In which case you've got
what you've got, and you can then either cash it in (and risk causing a price
drop) or actually, you know, spend it.
So will
Bitcoin ever reach a stable value? Will that value be less or more than you
paid for it? Or will it crash and burn spectacularly, leaving you with just a
bunch of worthless zeros and ones?
That's what
it's all about eventually, isn’t it? Those are the three major questions
hanging over the head of Bitcoin like the Sword of Damacles:
1.
Will the price of Bitcoin ever become stable?
2.
Will the eventual price of Bitcoin be worth less that I paid for it?
3.
Will Bitcoin fail, making all coins worthless?
Can we
realistically answer them at this time? Not completely, but we can make some
assumptions that may help. For a start all three questions are not equal,
so it's necessary for us to look at them in the wrong order (trust me on this). Let's look at number 3 first:
Q3. Will
Bitcoin fail, making all coins worthless?
If the
answer to this one is YES, then the first two become irrelevant. So we'll
park this question first, and to allow us to go on and address the other two,
we'll assume for now that the answer is NO - Bitcoin will survive.
Q1. Will
the price of Bitcoin ever become stable?
By stable,
we'll assume we mean that the price of Bitcoin fluctuates no more than ordinary
currency does today, allowing slight speculation to take place, but more
importantly allowing people to trade goods for BTC, safe in the knowledge that
the coins they accepted as payment won't suddenly be worth half or twice as
much a week later. We can't answer this one yet, but we can see that
unless the answer to this one is YES, then the next question also becomes
meaningless.
Q2. Will
the eventual price of Bitcoin be worth less than I paid for it?
And of
course the answer to this one depends entirely on you, and what you paid
for your Bitcoins.
So where do
we go from here? Well, things hinge on whether Bitcoin will succeed or
fail. Obviously the hoarders at present do have a vested interest in it
succeeding, and to a certainly extent they are helping prevent it from failing
by continuing to keep it a marketable commodity. But there is also evidence
that it is gaining mainstream ground as a method of payment. It is
certainly starting to be accepted as payment by people and small businesses
(mainly in the IT or IT-savvy online community).
This goes a
long way to increasing confidence in Bitcoin as an online currency primarily
designed to be traded (which, don't forget, is actually what it was originally
designed to be). And there is also no evidence that anyone accepting
coins has made a drastic loss or gone out of business. How come, since
the price fluctuates so wildly?
The secret
is probably that these online traders aren't hoarding coins. They're accepting them in payment for goods, and then either cashing them out
for the current dollar value or exchanging them for other goods themselves. Since Bitcoin values have tended to increase there's little or no risk in doing
this, and almost certain reward (if small) since the dollar amount you get back
has a strong tendency to be more than the dollar value the goods you sold are
worth. OK, there have been weekly dips, but that's not a problem to
the holder of a few coins – you simply hold onto them until the price climbs
back up again (as it always does) and you're back in profit.
What if
there's a big crash (and let's be honest, there have been a few), and the price
halves? Again, if you're not hoarding coins, this shouldn't affect you that
much. You simply hold onto those coins until the price climbs back up.
Or…and this
is the clever bit with Bitcoin…you adjust the price of your goods. Bitcoin makes this incredibly easy to do. Let's say that the dollar value
of a laptop that you want to sell is $900 and the current price of 1 BTC is
also $900. So you charge 1 BTC per laptop. But Bitcoin is
divisible, currently to 8 decimal places. Which means the smallest amount
of Bitcoin you can charge is 10-8 BTC, or 0.00000001 BTC. If
the price of Bitcoin suddenly drops, and now they're only worth $450, you
simply charge 2 BTC for your laptops, or if the price doubles, you charge 0.5
BTC. This model is already being used by one of the most successful
operations to take payment in Bitcoin – the Cryptolocker Ransomware
virus.
Of course
if you've still got 100 Bitcoins left over from last week (when you sold 100
laptops) then you can only get $45,000 back instead of the $90,000 your laptops
cost you. If you can really afford to take the hit, then cash them in. If
you can't, but you can afford to wait for payment, then hold on to them until
Bitcoin climbs back up to $900 (and there's evidence that it will – it has
before). But the far safer method is to ensure you don't have 100
Bitcoins hanging around in your wallet, by passing them on (either in return
for goods or services yourself, or in return for dollars) as soon as you get
them. This is how Bitcoin (and in fact all currencies) should be used, as
a payment method, not as a commodity. The less you hoard, the less a
price drop hits you. This inherent scalability of Bitcoin may actually help us
return to Question 2:
Q2. Will
the eventual price of Bitcoin be worth less than I paid for it?
One thing you
may or may not know about Bitcoin is that unlike ordinary currencies, Bitcoin
has a limit to the amount of coins that can exist. That limit is built
into the Bitcoin algorithm, and is 21,000,000. That's right. No
more than 21 Million Bitcoins will ever exist. Banks can print more money if
they need to, but nobody can "print" more Bitcoins once the limit has
been reached. So how does this have a bearing on the eventual price of
Bitcoin?
Well, if
Bitcoin survives (and we've already assumed it will, otherwise there's no point
in attempting to answer questions about its value) then it will do so by
becoming a global currency/monetary transfer system that will be applicable in
as many circumstances as possible. In other words, you should be able to
use it to buy or sell anything that you want, from a loaf of bread to a
penthouse apartment in London's West End.
But can't
we already do this? Well practically not quite. Look at the current
dollar/BTC exchange rate - $900 as I wrote this. With no more than a
possible 21M coins in existence, what's the maximum transaction you can make?
That's a simple one:
$900 x
21,000,000 = $18,900,000,000
Eighteen
Billion Dollars is the maximum transaction that can be made with Bitcoin at
present. But that also assumes that a) those coins actually exist, and b)
you currently own all those Bitcoins yourself (so you can transfer them to the
other party).
Well
firstly only about $12 Million coins exist at present, because the others
haven't yet been "mined". So that knocks the figure down to
$10.8 Billion. Secondly no one user has all of those 12 million coins. In
fact it's likely that no individual user has more than 1% of this figure (120,000 coins) and certainly far less. But to be charitable we'll assume that
out of all the Bitcoin users in the world, one of them has 12,000 coins. How much (in dollar value) can be bought with those coins?
Not quite
$11 Million.
If Bitcoin
is going to be used world-wide, it needs to be able to be used for transactions
in the figure of Billions. With the dollar value of Bitcoin at $900 this
isn't feasible. It needs to be far higher. How much
higher?
Take a deep
breath. We are now in a position to answer Question 2…
Q2. Will
the eventual price of Bitcoin be worth less than I paid for it?
If Bitcoin
is to be accepted as a global currency, it needs to be able to transfer large and small
amounts of money. Yes, you've got to be able to pay for
something worth $10 with Bitcoin. At present you can. With the dollar
exchange rate at $900 per BTC, 0.01 BTC would be worth about $9. But that
still doesn't enable us to use Bitcoins to move the Big Bucks around.
Remember
that the smallest divisible unit of Bitcoin is 10-8 BTC (0.00000001 BTC). So for that to be used as the smallest amount of money, it would have to equate
to 1 cent in dollar value. So if 0.00000001 = 1 cent…what is 1 BTC worth? Well a cent is 0.01 of a dollar, so the figure is 0.01/0.00000001.
(Cue Doctor
Evil)
"1 Million
Dollars!"
Which would
make the eventual full amount of Bitcoin in existence (21 million) worth
21,000,000 x $1,000,000.
"21
Trillion Dollars!!"
To put that
into some sort of perspective, the net worth of the Microsoft corporation in
2013 was estimated at approximately $70 Billion. So providing 1 BTC is
worth a million dollars, and 0.00000001 BTC is worth 1 cent, Bitcoin can be
used to buy anything from a stick of chewing gum to a major software
corporation.
Is it
feasible that Bitcoin will ever reach this figure? Well in order to use
the designed scalability of the currency to buy a box of matches, or shares in
Apple then yes it has to. OK, perhaps not that high. Even with only
10-7 worth a single cent, that still makes 1 BTC equal to $100,000,
and the total net worth of all 21 million coins equal to 2 trillion dollars,
which is still high enough for large transactions.
But without
an unlimited number of Bitcoins in circulation, It turns out that the dollar
value of 1 BTC has to be high to enable trading to be done with a small number
of coins. The more coins you have to own in order to trade, the less
likely you will be to actually have them. If your transaction requires
you to have more
coins than you can practically get, then you can't make the transaction. If the transaction reaquires more than 21 million coins (at the current dollar exchange rate)
then it would be impossible to make that transaction
Practically
of course, it all depends on two things here:
1. What range
of products will Bitcoin eventually be used for?
2. How many
transactions take place at any one time?
Well
Bitcoin probably won't be used for buying and selling major corporations
(although it may well be used for buying shares in those corporations), but
buying and selling cars might feasibly be done with Bitcoin. With no more than
21 million coins in eventual existence and in order for Bitcoin to be used
worldwide, most transactions would need to be of the order of fractions of a
BTC.
Taking
buying a car as an example, a figure of around $20,000 doesn't sound
unreasonable. If such a transaction involved a single Bitcoin, then no
more than 21 million such transactions could take place at any one time. But if we used our previous assumption that the smallest unit of Bitcoin (10-8
BTC) equals 1 cent, then to buy or sell something worth $20,000 would involve
the exchange of 10-6 BTC, or 0.000001 BTC. So our previous
figure of $1 Million for 1BTC is still a reasonable assumption.
At first
glance this is an incredibly high dollar value, and the fact that Bitcoins
appear to be approaching "ridiculous" values is often cited as a
reason why the currency will never succeed. But will a high value prevent
people trading in Bitcoin? Well no, there doesn't seem to be any reason
why just because no individual can afford to buy a single Bitcoin that we
shouldn't continue to trade in them. After all very few individuals on
this planet can afford to buy a solid gold ingot, but that doesn't stop people
from buying far smaller amounts (like the gold ring I have on my finger at this
moment). Hundred Dollar Bills exist, and very few people use them, but
the Dollar is doing fine.
In fact at
the present dollar value of Bitcoin ($900), very few people can now afford to
buy a single BTC (although several people do own them) but smaller fractions are well
within the pocket of an individual. Currently though the smallest
amount of coin that can feasibly be traded is 0.00002 BTC (which would equal
just under 2 cents) and as we've already seen, at that value there simply
aren't enough Bitcoins in existence to trade in the millions. But as
Bitcoin gains acceptance and people want to make transactions involving higher
amounts, the price of Bitcoin has no choice but to increase.
So let's
look at those questions again. But this time in the correct order.
1. Will the
eventual price of Bitcoin be worth less than I paid for it?
If it
becomes stable and doesn't fail, then over the long term definitely NO.
2. Will the
price of Bitcoin ever become stable?
As long as
it succeeds, then YES
3. Will
Bitcoin fail, making all coins worthless?
On balance,
probably not. In fact, remember the earlier mention of the Cryptolocker
Ransomware virus? The malware authors demanded payment in Bitcoins. This caused a rise in Bitcoin transactions and a corresponding rise in
Bitcoin's dollar value. In fact this is the strongest indicator so far
that as Bitcoin transactions increase, so does the value of Bitcoins.
So that
brings us to a 4th Question, which is probably the one you're most
interested in:
4. Should I
invest in Bitcoin now? Or is it too late?
The current
price (as of writing) is $900 a Bitcoin, and it's certainly going to end up far
higher. But if you're worried about risk, obviously don't
buy a single coin for $900, just remember that BTC is scalable. Buy 0.1
for $90. Or 0.01 for $9. That's not much to lose if the unthinkable
happens and Bitcoin crashes. But if it doesn't…
At
$1,000,000 a Bitcoin, your 0.01BTC would eventually be worth $10,000. At
$100,000 a Bitcoin it would be worth $1,000. Even at $10,000 a coin you're
looking at $100.
So the answer is Yes. Invest
what you can afford, and don't mind losing.
4 comments:
OK, since writing that (and buying 0.05 BTC for £27) the price of bitcoin has dropped somewhat. We're now talking around $600 for 1BTC. Which means my recent purchase is now worth about £18, so I've lost £9. However as usual bitcoin's value is heavily affected by external factors, and the exchange Mt.Gox has been having some difficulties lately. Once Mt.Gox comes back online, expect a minor run on bitcoin, dropping the price even further. However this has happened before and it will happen again, so I'm not unduly worried....yet.
Once Mt.Gox comes back online? Ha ha. But notice the price hasn't dropped much since I wrote this comment, and the recent decision by the UK Government to scrap VAT on Bitcoin transactions may well cause the price to go up. Hell, these days a blue sky or a Y in the month is likely to cause Bitcoins to increase in value!
We're in a bit of an upward spiral at present, though it's worth looking at past history. From my first comment above, we can see that BTC dropped from $900 to about $600 in February 2014. It stayed roughly at that level for the next 3 years, before suddenly having a surge and breaking the e $1,000 barrier in January this year.
Current price of Bitcoin $2,660 (as of today). From past experience it will probably drop back to around $1,200 soon, and then languish there for another few years. My recommendation? Now is the time to buy goods, not Bitcoin. Wait until the price drops back down, then buy coins.
It has been interesting looking back on the history of this post. I note that at the time of writing 1BTC was equal to about $900, and I speculated that it might reach $10,000. Then in 2017 I commented on the post to the effect that 1BTC was now worth $1,000.
As of today (August 2021) Bitcoin is now worth $39,280. In early May of this year it peaked at $57,600 before dropping down to a low of around $34,800. This appears to be the customary mid-year trough that Bitcoin regulary experiences, and there are already signs that it is starting to climb out of it. I would not be surprised if it ended the year at above $80,000.
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