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davidlerner.com > Financial Literacy  > David Lerner Associates: Is Bitcoin Just a Trend or the Future of Currency?

David Lerner Associates: Is Bitcoin Just a Trend or the Future of Currency?

Is Bitcoin Just a Trend or the Future?

What if somebody informed you about an investment that has made some people millionaires overnight and has both a variety of high-profile supporters and a global reach? Would you be lured to invest? Now what if someone told you that the exact same investment also could lose most or all of its value almost overnight, and that you might not have access to your money when you need it? How does this sound now?

You have just confronted the debate surrounding the five-year-old digital phenomenon known as Bitcoin. An alternate unit of currency that exists strictly as digital code, Bitcoin has received a great deal of attention, especially within the last year. In part that is because speculation in Bitcoin has led to wild gyrations in its value.

Is Bitcoin an investment? A scam? A network of computers? The potential future of currency? If you are confused about what all the fuss is about, here is a brief introduction to just what it is, how it works, and what is been happening in the Bitcoin world lately, in addition to some of the potential pitfalls it presents.

Bitcoin as currency

Bitcoin is not a single company but a digital currency reinforced by a peer-to-peer computer-based electronic cash system first outlined in 2009 by an undisclosed person or group using the name Satoshi Nakamoto. To understand how the unit of currency functions, you have to understand where it stems from. Unlike published currency or coins that are minted, Bitcoin is created by "mining"– using complex software to solve complicated mathematical computations (or contracting with a mining company to do it for you). Solving a problem creates a so-called "block," and the computer that solved it is rewarded with a set number of digital bitcoins, each of which is just a set of one public and one private cryptographic key. (The units are generally "bitcoins," while the general system is "Bitcoin.") The number of solutions that can be discovered worldwide per hour (and thus the number of "blocks" created and bitcoins mined) is restricted by the system is software code. The total number of bitcoins readily available to be mined eventually is claimed to be limited to 21 million, with approximately 12.5 million already in circulation. * However, most users acquire them by either buying them with physical currencies such as dollars or accepting them as payment for goods and services.

Advocates argue that the advantages of the system are: (1) it is not controlled by any government is central bank, (2) a worldwide virtual currency facilitates global industrial transactions, (3) every block and Bitcoin transaction is recorded, and (4) though transactions are recorded, the payer and payee are anonymous, much like a cash deal. (However, that anonymity has attracted charges that its chief use so far has been for illegal activities such as money laundering; last October the FBI closed down the Silk Road Bitcoin exchange and seized its assets.).

How are bitcoins used to pay for something?

Just as a physical wallet holds paper money and change, a virtual wallet holds the private software keys that are bitcoins. It makes or receives payments by communicating with the network of other Bitcoin wallets. Some merchants and services, especially those that focus on online or international sales, are starting to explore Bitcoin transactions. Physical bitcoins, which have a software key embedded in them, have begun to be minted. However, acceptance of bitcoins as payment is entirely at a seller is discretion; there is no guarantee you will be able to spend them where you want to or get the value you expect. Also, as outlined below, problems at some exchanges have sometimes impeded access to Bitcoin funds.

Speculating in Bitcoin

Bitcoin is usage as a currency is a ripple compared with the tidal waves of investment speculation it has fueled. "Investing" in bitcoins merely means acquiring them through one of the methods outlined above. However, to say that Bitcoin as an investment is volatile is an understatement. Over its five-year history, its value has fluctuated wildly as both speculation and confidence in it as a currency have ebbed and surged. In April 2013, after rising from $90 to $260 over two weeks, a bitcoin is value plummeted to $130 in just six hours. Since mid-2010, it has gone from a low of $2 USD to as high as $1,200 last November, with multiple double-digit crashes in between. After China cracked down on virtual currency transactions by financial institutions and halted deposits of yuan at exchanges there, Bitcoin is worth in dollars was cut by more than half.

That volatility has resulted in problems for people trying to make payments in bitcoins. It is hard to use a currency when you are not sure from day to day whether the amount in your virtual wallet is worth enough to buy a Range Rover or a tank of gas. Complicating the issue is the fact that the value can vary on different Bitcoin exchanges.

However, volatility is only one of the problems that has created havoc in the Bitcoin universe. Earlier this year, one exchange announced that a hacker had made off with some of the funds stored there, and cyberattacks halted trading briefly on two major exchanges in February. Days later, Mt. Gox, at one point said to be the world is largest Bitcoin exchange, shuttered its website, leaving customers with their money in limbo for days before declaring that the company was bankrupt and nearly half a billion dollars worth of bitcoins had vanished (though some were subsequently located). Worse than not knowing how much your bitcoins will buy is not knowing whether they are available to buy anything at all.

Hackers and bankruptcy are not the only reasons Bitcoin holders could lose the ability to spend or exchange their funds. Because of the accusations of money laundering via Bitcoin, scrutiny of digital transactions is increasing. If a law enforcement agency seized the assets of a digital platform or exchange, as they did with Silk Road, access to digital wallets there could be restricted.

The Wild West rides again

So far, regulatory oversight of Bitcoin has been spotty; the closest thing to a regulatory body is the Bitcoin Foundation, a private organization that "standardizes, protects, and promotes" Bitcoin usage. The currency is not backed by either a government or any physical asset such as gold. Major exchanges are located around the world, and the decentralized nature of the system makes things more challenging for governmental regulators to get a handle on it. Up until now there has been little oversight by any U.S. regulatory body; in fact, testimony before a U.S. Senate committee that no new regulations were necessary for virtual currencies helped send Bitcoin to its peak last November. Unlike accounts at FDIC-insured banks, there is no protection for possible loss from a digital wallet. Also, unlike credit card charges, Bitcoin transactions are irreversible.

The Internal Revenue Service provided a small additional regulatory clearness in March when it announced it will treat Bitcoin holdings as property instead of as a currency for tax purposes. That means that the sales or exchange of bitcoins that have gained in value since they were acquired could potentially trigger a tax liability. Also, payments made in bitcoins are subject to the same information reporting requirements as any other payments made in property. And wages paid in Bitcoin must be reported on a W-2 form and are taxable as income, just as any other wages would be.

Speculation has not been limited to the currency on its own. Much as the Internet did in its early days, Bitcoin also has generated an entire ecosystem of startup companies and venture capitalists who want to belong to developing the technology and networks involved in producing and transferring it. Along with multiple exchanges, firms have begun offering data on the online currency is price and status and creating Bitcoin-based products, including the first ATM in the United States. And similar to early Internet companies, such ventures are likely to involve a high degree of uncertainty and risk.

Certainly, virtual currency still faces a great deal of challenges. If you are considering exploring it, either for transactions or as a speculative investment, you should become much more familiar with it than simply relying on this dialogue. And due to the problems outlined above, you should be readied for dramatic price swings and only use money that you are not depending on for something else.

* Source: www.coindesk.com, March 26, 2014.

** Source: "Bitcoin panic selling halves its value," April 11, 2013, BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk).

*** Source: www.bitcoincharts.com, March 26, 2014.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

Material contained in this article is provided for information purposes only and is not intended to be used in connection with the evaluation of any investments offered by David Lerner Associates, Inc. This material does not constitute an offer or recommendation to buy or sell securities and should not be considered in connection with the purchase or sale of securities.

David Lerner Associates Inc. does not provide tax or legal advice. The information presented here is not specific to any individual is personal circumstances.

To the extent that this material concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed by law. Each taxpayer should seek independent advice from a tax professional based on his or her individual circumstances.

These materials are provided for general information and educational purposes based upon publicly available information from sources believed to be reliable– we cannot assure the accuracy or completeness of these materials. The information in these materials may change at any time and without notice.

Some of this material has been provided by Broadridge Investor Communications Solutions, Inc.

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