Wednesday 2 September 2020

Bitcoin - Latest

While ordinary stock market shares are yo yo-ing with uncertainty, technological giants Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and similar, are positively soaring .The covid pandemic is accelerating transition to the digital and technological age.

But the best performing asset of the last decade was Bitcoin. Still prone to sudden sharp up and down price movement, but overall trend is up, and traditional banks are starting to get interested. 

Interest in cryptocurrencies is rising because businesses and holders of cash fear that government support payments to individuals and businesses, weaken the U.S. Fiat currency (Fiat - from the Latin 'It shall be'-  Fiat money that has no intrinsic value, i.e it's just paper! - but governments decree 'It shall Be' legal tender). 


This is confirmed by traditional banking institutions, like JPMorgan Chase, cautiously hedging digital currencies onto their platform. 

In May, the largest retail bank in America, JPMorgan, which has historically 
been a staunch 

opponent of Bitcoin, announced it is already processing crypto transactions on its platform, and plans to create JPM Coin, a digital currency tied to the dollar. A crypto coin available universally, not requiring any changing, will speed up and reduce costs of sending money anywhere in the world.


 In June, CoinDesk reported that PayPal and Venmo are considering joining the crypto community by offering direct sales of cryptocurrencies. Earlier in August, we saw Goldman Sachs bring in a new head of digital assets to scale up its crypto operations.  

Crypto—once the reserve of gamers, coders, and early tech millionaires—is now a place where more people have access to an alternative system giving greater control over their wealth.

Anyone with a smartphone can access crypto without waiting for banks to open or a debit card to arrive. What's more, because crypto is decentralized, and uses a public ledger to show or hide records, there is a level of transparency that government programs do not provide.

For the most part, crypto currencies have operated in a world of their own. But in 2020—amid the coronavirus pandemic—interest in crypto has boomed. That interest is mainly with investors and speculators and causes high volatility as they try to make money buying the dip and selling the tip of price movement.  

Bitcoin won't be generally accepted for daily bread and butter shopping until there is some price stability. Finding the price of potatoes and other staples has risen dramatically between home and shop will see to that.

The value of money is changing. As Americans continue to receive financial assistance and businesses utilize (PPP) Payroll Protection Programs, the value of the dollar is dropping. Earlier this week, the U.S. Dollar Index was at its lowest level since May 2018.

So more people will hedge money from the devaluing dollar into gold and silver, the traditional alternative stores of value. And now cryptocurrencies give another option.

Bitcoin is established. There is a reason why the most prestigious university endowments, such as those affiliated with Harvard, Stanford, and MIT, all invest in crypto funds. 

If you have spare funds that you can afford to lose - (cryptocurrencies are prone to high volatility in their early years) - then invest some in Bitcoin and Digital assets. 

The Future is Digital. 
https://steemit.com/bitcoin/@ijavee/bitcoin-latest 
 
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