As said before, Fiat Cash was hopelessly handicapped in this contest since by definition inflation is the loss of value of Fiat Cash (meaning M2 - notes and coin and checking accounts, not deposits). So it scored zero in the category of Purchasing Power.
So the characteristics of FIAT is that it's a bad store of value? We all get that - understood. You think this is not a fair comparison but why isn't it? You talk of deposits. I don't think a hedge fund is putting money in the post office. He covers bonds/the yield curve. And as to the suggestion that he shouldn't have compared FIAT, the reason he should is because there's a wall of wealth sitting in USD right now on the sidelines. It has been used in the past as a store of value in these circumstances and it is being used as such today (even though its a bad store of value). For that reason, they were right to assess it. Sorry that you don't like the outcome which was this:
“If something is by design going to depreciate 2% per year through inflation, why own it?”
The sponsor of the contest made a big pitch for Bitcoin:
You mean that the results of the research and analysis of a hedge fund with no connection to the crypto sector led to findings that make a strong case for including bitcoin in an investment portfolio.
Notwithstanding this endorsement Bitcoin came plumb last, even behind the hobbled Fiat Cash. PTJ's observation on this performance was as follows: So despite his enthusiastic promotion of the brilliance of bitcoin he still expected to to come in last.
What 'promotion'? This guy doesn't have anything to do with the crypto sector. He's a respected player within the hedge fund industry.
In the event it got a total thumbs down on Trustworthiness which shows a considerable amount of ignorance on behalf of the Research Group - the White Paper makes a big play about how bitcoin avoids the need for trust in Central Banks.
No it doesn't. It shows a convenient misinterpretation by yourself as to how they defined 'trustworthiness' for the purposes of this analysis:
"Trustworthiness: How it is perceived through time and universally as a store of value."
It's not an assessment on the basis that its peer to peer money that, through its design from the outset, assumes a lack of trust. Its a consideration of how it's
perceived over
time. Their conclusions:
"No surprise here Bitcoin got the lowest score because it is also the youngest entrant at 11 years of age."
The metric here is time - and it's the youngest asset in the contest in the race by the longest of distances.
The fact that it wasn't as bad a last as PTJ expected has persuaded him to have a punt on bitcoin with no more than 2% of his portfolio - a "great speculation" in his own words.
So its a new asset that is showing great promise in terms of its characteristics as a store of value - but its an unknown as it hasn't been round the block by comparison with the alternatives. Hedge funds tend to be conservative. Bitcoin as a mature asset class would score much higher. But therein lies the speculation. He likens the potential for bitcoins performance to that of gold in the 1970s when it shot up in value in the face of rampant inflation. Should conditions favour a similar scenario (a bout of inflation), there's a hell of a lot more upside potential in bitcoin (a formative store of value) than gold (a mature asset).
And there are those in the bitcoin community who have heralded this as a ringing endorsement by a leading hedge fund manager
What's far more significant is that there are those not in the bitcoin community but in the hedge fund industry who have sat up and taken notice. Furthermore, most within bitcoin circles suggest that every portfolio should have a couple of % of said portfolio in bitcoin. The logic is similar. Whilst bitcoin is formative as a new asset and store of value, the upside potential outweighs the risk and then some. That was the case before consideration of 'the great inflation'. It's got an even stronger case given the current environment.
He then makes a point that bitcoin, being a mere fraction of the market cap of gold can only make up that difference through a price increase. I mean really!?
So everyone accepts that bitcoin is formative in its progression towards digital gold and/or an uncorrelated asset in its own right. It has several advantages over gold such as the following: Its digital, portable, divisible, difficult to counterfeit and easy to authenticate. It's market runs 24/7-365 - making it much more accessible. It's started out from a stand still compared with assets that have been around for donkeys years. If it brings good characteristics to the table in terms of a store of value - with several advantages over other assets - then why shouldn't it take a greater market share? Its market capitalisation right now is less than 2% of that of gold.
He tells us elsewhere that bitcoin has 10 times the market cap of rival cryptos. Surely by the aforesaid "logic" that gives much greater scope for a price surge in bitcoin's over 7,000 crypto lookalikes.
That wayward argument has been outed here a long time ago. Firstly, on the 7,000 cryptos, do you want to exaggerate some more for even more sensational effect? How many of the 2,000 cryptocurrencies pursue a store of value use case? Very few. Of those, what advantage do they have over bitcoin in terms of store of value use case? When we talk of X number of cryptocurrencies, we're talking about X number of projects. They don't go beyond project status if they don't provide unique advantages over bitcoin in a store of value use case (without dropping the ball on some other essential characteristic). In terms of market capitalisation, bitcoin is 67% dominant in the overall marketplace - which includes digital assets that don't pursue a store of value use case.
When it comes to Gold vs. Bitcoin, bitcoin presents with several unique advantages over the monetary metal.
I don't think I have been to an ATM this year. I do carry notes as a sort of emergency or to drop something in an SVP box. I don't know about where PTJ hangs out but here in Ireland digitization of the currency is not coming - it has well and truly arrived.
The process of digitisation is ongoing and evolving. There's plenty of cash in use globally (and in Ireland). In the States, they're still using cheques. Secondly, it's a misunderstanding to think that digitisation stops at visa payments. Sweden is the closest to a cashless society. However, they have a E-Krona project opened to bring about a digital currency. A state isn't going to leave the entire ability of citizens to exchange value in the hands of a couple of multi-nationals.
That's what he talks about in terms of digitisation in the context of money. State mandated digital currencies are coming. Corporate digital currencies are coming (Libra). And his point is this:
"It will make the understanding, utility, and ease of ownership of Bitcoin a much more commonplace option than it is today".
It makes complete sense to me. Baby boomers and Gen X folk have a more difficult time getting to grips with virtual currencies. That's not an issue for millennials and those that follow after them. People are going to get much more comfortable in using them - together with such currencies themselves becoming much easier to use over time.
Why bitcoin over any of the 8,000 other crypto currencies?
8,000 is it? Ok, Pinocchio - if you think that adds credence to your viewpoint, fair play.
Okay, I Googled CBDC. We don't want to stray too far off topic but is my understanding correct that with a CBDC rather than a conventional Euro entry on a bank ledge, the former is backed directly by the Central Bank?
I feel fairly sure that it was the digitization of the payment that PTJ was referring to rather than the backing of the digital entry as I don't see Covid-19 having any particular implications for this latter.
It's not off topic at all - it's entirely relevant to the discussion at hand. Secondly, it's patently clear he was very much including the development of CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currencies) and Corporate Digital Currencies (Facebook's Libra) in this consideration of the drive towards greater digitisation. He states:
"The probable introduction of Facebook’s Libra (whose value will be pegged to the US dollar and will not be a store of value in that sense) as well as China’s DCEP, also tied to the yuan, will make virtual digital wallets a commonplace tool for the world."