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krugman25
The ultimate result of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies will be a transfer of wealth from many poor, late adopters to a few wealthy, early adopters. A substantial amount of Bitcoin is in industry hands.
Several upcoming Bitcoin ETFs and increasing acceptance of Bitcoin as payment will likely supportive of prices for a while, allowing some big players to reduce their holdings into new liquidity.
India and Turkey, or it may have been another country in the Middle East, have banned Bitcoin, which might be considered as an early warning, like “Dead canaries in a coal mine”, so to speak. Throughout human monetary history, competing forms of payment against established forms of currency have had a rocky road. This history even includes gold. The more popular Bitcoin becomes, the quicker its demise, as Governments realize the effectiveness of their monetary and economic policies are reduced against a competing form of payment.
If, or when, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are ultimately outlawed or otherwise substantially hobbled by Government action, the fantasy that a viable black market in cryptocurrency can be maintained would soon be broken, as all computer operating systems and communications are vulnerable to Government action.
Cryptocurrencies, especially Bitcoin, are being professionally marketed as an investment for “Suave, smart, sophisticates”. This marketing effort shows there are big players talking their book. Would this not be considered a solid sign these big players are wanting to reduce their exposure into liquidity? While the near term price outlook of Bitcoin seems positive, Bitcoin is not the sort of “Asset class” you want to plan on leaving to your kids.
This is all about narratives. You describe this market as wealthy early adopters taking money for poor later adopters. You also describe saavy marketing from big players to pump exit liquidity.
Let's break this down. Early adopters and investors make more money than late. Isn't that true for any market? If you invested in Apple, Microsoft, Google, etc. early, you likely made significantly more than someone who invested later on. Marketing? You're telling me nobody markets gold? Nobody markets Apple? Nobody markets Microsoft? Nobody markets Tesla?
Looking at objectively, Bitcoin is following the same path as many other emerging technologies that came before it. The only difference is the narrative people use to describe it.
There are a lot of solid criticisms that can be hurled at Bitcoin. Those criticisms require a technical knowledge of Bitcoin and getting past these lazy, regurgitated talking points.
