Here Is Goldman's Annotated Chart Showing The History Of Bitcoin

in bitcoin •  7 years ago 

Content adapted from this Zerohedge.com article : Source


by Tyler Durden

Goldman has long had a love, hate relationship with bitcoin: while JPM's Jamie Dimon was slamming it and threatening anyone caught trading it with termination, Lloyd Blankfein was planning the rollout of a cryptotrading desk. While other brokerages were shunning futures trading, Goldman told clients "your money is welcome here." On the other hand, from a purely fundamental standpoint, Goldman was more ambivalent, unwilling or unable to embrace the currency, yet laying out under what conditions it may succeed as money, which nonetheless was a far cry from JPM's blanket determination that bitcoin is a pyramid scheme.

Then, this morning, the market awoke to a Goldman report that was released on Monday evening, in which as we reported earlier, Steve Strongin - Head of Goldman's Global Investment Research - said that the current generation of cryptocurrencies is unlikely to survive even if blockchain technology endures:

**Whether any of today's cryptocurrencies will survive over the long run seems unlikely to me, although parts of them may evolve and survive.... **To my eye, they still seem too primitive to be the long-term answer.

Asked if the market is accurately pricing the likelihood that several—if not most—of the current cryptocurrencies will ultimately fail?, his answer was surprisingly pessimistic:

I don't believe it is. People seem to be trading cryptocurrencies as though they're all going to survive, or at least maintain their value. The high correlation between the different cryptocurrencies worries me. Contrary to what one would expect in a rational market, new currencies don't seem to reduce the value of old currencies; they all seem to move as a single asset class. But if you believe this is a "few-winnerstake-most" situation, then the potential for retirement depreciation should be taken into account. And because of the lack of intrinsic value, the currencies that don't survive will most likely trade to zero.

To be sure, Goldman did highilight some of the notable highlights of bitcoin, chief among which is the unprecedented value storage density, which is why Goldman's commodity chief proposes calling them not cryptocurrencies but rather cryptocommodities.

Despite being called cryptocurrencies, bitcoin and other digital assets are better described as "cryptocommodites." A financial security—currencies included—has a claim or liability attached to it, as it is "secured" to an underlying real asset. Just as equity is secured to the future earnings of a real company, a dollar bill is secured to the US government and its tax revenue. In contrast, commodities have no obligation or liability to any government, company, or other entity. Given that bitcoin has no liability to any entity, it is a good like any other commodity. Bitcoin just happens to be the first digital commodity—in contrast to financial assets and money, which have long been digitized.

In most economies, a standard digital bank account provides ease of storage, secure transactions, and a positive carry. However, it is still a claim on a bank, and the funds cannot be concealed and transported without alerting regional authorities. **To the extent that this is a problem, bitcoin solves it better than any other commodity (although other cryptocurrencies are starting to offer superior privacy and anonymity). **This suggests that black markets and less developed regions without a reliable banking system would be the obvious sources of demand for cryptocurrencies.

But the most remarkable feature of cryptos: how much value they can concentrate in virtually no physical space.

Unlike other storage commodities like oil, gold, platinum, diamonds, and even cash, there is no need to hold much physical material to own bitcoin; **even a technology as obsolete as the 3½ inch floppy disk can hold almost 30,000 private keys. **There is no theoretical upper limit to the value of bitcoins in a wallet, but if we assume each wallet secured by this disk contains as much as the largest wallet today (180,000 BTC), this single disk could "hold" all bitcoins in existence and remain less than 0.5% full. Assuming a bitcoin market cap of roughly $190bn (as of late January), this disk would be the equivalent to either: 95% of the 4,583 tons of gold in Fort Knox, or 1,344 Very Large Crude Carrier supertankers of oil.

Goldman's conclusion:

On net, cryptocurrencies have superior physical attributes relative to other commodities for concealing and transporting large amounts of wealth, which could be valuable in dark markets and some areas that lack reliable banking systems. But a long list of hurdles remains for cryptocurrencies to reach the equivalence of precious metals in financial markets, and these will be difficult to overcome anytime soon.** In the meantime, we believe gold still offers the best store of wealth given how institutionalized it has become over 3,000 years of active trading versus five years for bitcoin.**

So bitcoin... or gold? To Goldman that is the question. Meanwhile, for your viewing pleasure, here is Goldman's chart showing the annotated history of bitcoin's Rise... and recent fall. The question is what happens next.


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I expect we'll see a real shakeout in the market and that the overwhelming majority of cryptocurrencies currently in the market will fail. A lot of them are scams and deserve to fail. But some of them that have real utility will endure and emerge stronger than ever. I suspect Goldman was a little late in getting into the crypto markets and is trying to talk the market down so it can buy cheap.

I don't agree with Steven Strongin's view that cryptocurrencies are not surviving in the long run. We've seen cryptocurrencies through thick and thin for some years now. Falling down several times but they always come back up. Yes, the prices might drop completely in the future, but they will always be back still.. whether in a short time or in some months. People should thus not invest more than what they are willing to lose in a long period. Because the prices might take a very long time to get back up.

And still if it means not surviving in the future, then not all will not survive. We shall have a percentage of cryptocurrencies that will make it through, probably 10%.

Tnx for your bitcoin news .I think that this bitcoin price is just overrated and now its losing its value andI also think if there was an EMP strong enough to take out 'the grid' with internet down etc., there would be more to worry about than just my hodlings in BTC.

Btc overrated ? Lol Btc may worth a Million some day .

First thanks for sharing sir @zer0hedge
Second:-
I'm not trying to argue with you about Bitcoin specifically, but Google Chrome is based on open sourced Chromium. Android is based on Linux. It is pretty common for companies to take over someone else's idea, make it better, and dominate the space. Given that Bitcoin is open source (like Chromium and Linux) and there's no one who can sue for copyright or patent infringement on the concept, this seems like a no-brainer to me. Owning even 2 million bitcoins does not give the owner any right to the underlying technology. It's like having 2 million separate downloads of Chromium on 2 million different computers running Linux OS, isn't it? You still don't "own" the code or the concept. I am genuinely curious about your reasoning for why this won't happen to Bitcoin.

I always follow your latest post to know more knowledge and development. thanks @zer0herdge

bitcoin keeps going one way and its a waterslide on the way down to where its supposed to be. In my oppinion the bitcoin value has been extremely overrated and is now on the way down to a more reasonable value. Things you can actually use as a resource like gold should be more valuable than cryptos Id say.

@zer0hedge.. bro its time to hold True. But I think there's some first to market stuff here. Bitcoin is essentially digitized gold. Now what will be the local medium of exchange? No idea. Like the automobile that eventually made horses the exclusive means of transportation only for the Amish and maybe George W Bush during a photo op, blockchain is probably here to stay. But for those who are curious, type "defunct auto manufacturers" into your search engine of choice to see the odds of any given blockchain based crypto surviving.

Good question "what happens next?". I think BTC would keep seeing bull and bear runs like these until all coins are mined, only then will BTC really become a better store of value than Gold.

wow..good post thanks for sharing..

Wow....excellent information of bitcoin, nice post, thanks for sharing

Never really thought about you could have that much money on a floppy disc!! however, I would ALWAYS choose a physical asset instead of a digital. as everything digital can crash and you could loose it all in a blink of an eye.

Thank you for the article. This reflects some of my doubts. Or my opinion lags behind the present, or we are dealing with a pyramid. Of course, I'm inclined to the first version, otherwise I would not be here. At present, staying here for me is tantamount to playing a monopoly, and also this: to communicate, to study the culture of other countries first-hand. I hope thatSteve Strongin is mistaken, and the crypto currency has long-term prospects.

wow well information in bitcoin keep it up