Bitcoin & Blockchain: All Hype or Part of a Financial Revolution?
Currencies / BlockChain Sep 22, 2017 - 06:07 PM GMTBy: Harry_Dent
	
	
  
Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan CEO,  says Bitcoin is a fraud – likening it to the 17th century tulip bubble – that  will eventually blow up. He said he’d fire any trader who traded it.
Ron Insana, CNBC contributor,  says Bitcoin is in a bubble, with investor enthusiasm driving it to a new fever  pitch. He’s cited several reasons why it will fail.
 
Are they right?
Is Bitcoin a modern-day tulip bubble leading greedy investors to the slaughter?
Well… yes AND no.
It’s complicated (which is why I’ve invited Bitcoin expert, Michael Terpin, to speak at our Irrational Economic Summit this October in Nashville).
I agree with both men that it’s a dangerous speculative trade right now. It is in a bubble, but we’re likely not near the top yet.
And, as a currency, Bitcoin is a fraud – it’s absolutely NOT a currency currently – but the underlying technology (blockchains et al.) will revolutionize the way we protect our personal information and the way we transact.
It’s the foundation for the bottom-up economy we’re becoming!
Let’s tackle each point in turn…
Bitcoin breached $4,000 per unit recently. And it’s gone up and down like a yo-yo! Just look at this chart, which contains both Bitcoin and Ethereum.

The most recent run in both is clearly a bubble. But, apply Elliott  Wave Theory to it and it looks like only a third wave up. This means there’s  now a fourth wave crash already in motion and then another steep fifth wave up  ahead.
  And this should be just the  first stage of a very long-term boom in the underlying technologies.
  The thing to understand here  is that these digital coins are trading more like the stocks of these  early-stage companies than a credible currency substitute. They are not  behaving like currencies… they’re not currencies yet… and they’re certainly not  a stable store of value.
  But with decades of high  growth, scale, efficiency, and consolidation, digital currencies could supplant  central banks with bottom-up creation and much more stable values!
  I hope I see that in my  lifetime. Stick it to the Central Banks! Man alive, I hate them!
That said, in the near term, like Jamie Dimon, I wouldn’t touch  any Bitcoin speculation with a 10-foot pole. If it drops back to around $2,000,  and if Ethereum gets near $150, then it could be  worth a play, but only as a high-risk speculative one for a small part of your  portfolio.
Beyond Bitcoin
Cryptocurrencies are one  thing. The technologies they’re built on are another thing entirely. And it’s  the latter that has really captured my imagination…
  For years now I’ve entertained growing concerns about the safety  and security of the internet. In 2015, my computer and email was hacked twice  in six weeks. My credit cards still get hacked  regularly and I’m forced to change them every three or four months.
  
  The internet is great for  googling information and communicating through email and Facebook and other  social platforms, but hackers are in control like the Russian mob. Online  financial transactions, and online personal details, are simply not safe or  secure. Equifax recently offered a brutal reminder of this fact.
  Blockchain technologies could  be the answer here. They could become a new platform for transactions,  providing greater transparency, practically unbreachable security, faster  speeds and lower costs!
  Don Tapscott, a Canadian business executive, author, consultant,  and speaker calls it “the Internet of Value or Money.” I discovered his latest  great book, Blockchain Revolution, after listening to  his 18-minute Ted talk.
  To people like Don and me, and  even Steve Jobs, information technologies, and now blockchain, are all about  bringing power to the people and eliminating centralized intermediaries.
  Put the information, the  transaction power, the control over our own identity in our own hands and let  us deal directly, peer-to-peer. This will allow our economy and businesses to  organize around customers and operate from the bottom-up, not the top-down.
  Based on the venture  capitalists clamoring to back blockchain technologies – $1.1 billion has been  invested since 2013 – this is a serious new technology and not some flash in  the pan. Yet to compare, internet companies got much more during their early  days.
  My 45-Year Innovation Cycle  sheds some light on this…
  There’s a big difference  between new technologies in their early stages in niche markets and their later  stages moving into the mainstream.
  The last such mainstream cycle  around personal computing and the internet ran from 1988 into 2010. Before that  it was electricity, phones, cars, radios, and TV from 1942 to 1965.
  It’s during that move into the  mainstream that whole new major industries and leading-edge companies are  created and growth and productivity soars.
  I see blockchain technology as  the next step in the “maturing” internet revolution. It’s not yet a major new  industry and job creator. But it could be, one day, as the next mainstream  revolution is set for 2032 to 2055.
  The internet made information  radically more accessible and affordable (if not free).
  That’s what blockchain  technologies propose to do for financial transactions!
  And like Uber and Airbnb, this  technology will initially be deflationary. It will lower costs and destroy more  jobs than it creates. It will disrupt the centralized, and often corrupt,  financial services industry.
  But like Wal-Mart and other  companies that followed maturing trends with lower costs, this will  paradoxically free up spending power for the everyday person and create easier  access to the economy and the financial system.
  This is part of how we  recreate the middle class again, just like we did after World War II.
  This is a big and eventually  lifechanging deal.
  Just don’t speculate on  Bitcoin. It’s in a bubble. Not of the tulip bubble proportions, but bubbly  enough to burn you.
Harry
Follow me on Twitter @HarryDentjr
Harry studied economics in college in the ’70s, but found it vague and inconclusive. He became so disillusioned by the state of the profession that he turned his back on it. Instead, he threw himself into the burgeoning New Science of Finance, which married economic research and market research and encompassed identifying and studying demographic trends, business cycles, consumers’ purchasing power and many, many other trends that empowered him to forecast economic and market changes.
Copyright © 2017 Harry Dent- All Rights Reserved Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors.
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