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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

Greek Financial Crisis Is an Opportunity For Bitcoin 359

An anonymous reader writes: Greece's economy has been in trouble for several years, now, and a major vote next weekend will shake it up even further. The country can't pay its debts, and the upcoming referendum will decide whether they face increased austerity measures or start the process of exiting the Euro. One side effect of the crisis is that alternative currencies like Bitcoin suddenly look much more attractive as the "normal" currencies become unstable. "Tony Gallippi, the co-founder of bitcoin payment processor Bitpay, tweeted on Sunday night that he expected the price of bitcoin to rise to between $610 and $1,250 if Greece exits the Euro. The currency is currently worth $250. Part of the reason why the crisis is so tempting for proponents of the cryptocurrency is the echoes of a previous crisis in the Eurozone: the banking collapse in Cyprus in 2013, which saw that nation also impose capital controls to prevent massive outflows of currency from the panicking country. That collapse came at the same time as the first major boom in the price of bitcoin, which began the year at less than $20 and peaked at ten times that by early April – before it all came crashing down."
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Greek Financial Crisis Is an Opportunity For Bitcoin

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  • Go away, Tony (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:43AM (#50010941)

    "Tony Gallippi, the co-founder of bitcoin payment processor Bitpay, tweeted on Sunday night that he expected the price of bitcoin to rise to between $610 and $1,250 if Greece exits the Euro. "

    In hopes of getting everyone to quickly buy Bitcoins so it actually rises and he can sell. Nice try.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:44AM (#50010945)

    >> alternative currencies like Bitcoin suddenly look much more attractive

    The problem most Greeks suddenly face is that their money is now locked up as electronic balances in banks that have shut down for a week and won't let them have more than 60 euros at a time. After crises like this (even America's own "great recession"), people tend to prefer forms of money are more than just bits or fiat paper, such as gold and silver.

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:51AM (#50010985) Journal

      Because the value of gold and silver is somehow less arbitrary than electronic bank balances.

      • by fatgraham ( 307614 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:53AM (#50011015) Homepage

        I think his point was that you'd have physical access to it, yknow, to buy physical bread and milk.

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:07AM (#50011149) Journal

          That is only if it buys bread and milk. The trouble Greece and most of the modern world has is that its entirely dependent on international trade. Greece can't meet its needs by itself. I am not an expert on the Greek economy. Lets charitably assume they can feed themselves. What about all the drugs that are not manufactured there that many depend upon to live for example? Can a private individual order drugs from across the boarder with gold coins? Can a pharmacy or hospital buying in quantity for that matter?

          Sure there are exchanges for gold abroad, ultimately the answer is yes; for some quantity of gold you can obtain enough Euro to buy what you need. Now if the banks are closed where you are that might mean sending someone abroad to physically execute these transactions where trading desks and banks are open.

          If the economy becomes truly unhinged, people stop working, stores close, etc than gold really is not all that great. If I am hungry and you are hungry, and neither of us imagines that changing anytime soon do you think I'll trade my pound of cheese for your gold?

          I am supportive of a gold standard in general because I think inflation and debt based currency is an insidious trap used to enslave all of us. A gold standard would prevent the vipers from manipulating things and causing recessions that last half of peoples productive lives, it would reduce inequality, it would reduce war, in exchange for more frequent smaller booms and busts. In short it would shrink many of the worlds problems. If you already have problems like Greece does it won't provide some magic fix, don't have any illusions about that.

        • I think his point was that you'd have physical access to it, yknow, to buy physical bread and milk.

          Only if you kept it in a big pile in your basement, which would have its own set of security and logistical problems.

          If on the other hand you keep you gold/silver in the vault of a bank that is now shut down for the week then you're right back to where you are now.

        • by clovis ( 4684 )

          I think his point was that you'd have physical access to it, yknow, to buy physical bread and milk.

          What people found out in the Argentinian crisis of 1998 and in the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990's, is that you cannot buy anything you want with gold.
          People want things that they can use (or must have), so the economy becomes barter - trade alcohol for cans of food, trade cigarette lighters for condoms, gasoline for alcohol.

          I kind of doubt there will be a market for trading a can of soup for bitcoins on a street corner. I can imagine that someone might setup a trading warehouse that dealt with bitcoins

      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        That is true, but gold/silver is more concrete. There is a psychological factor in concrete things.

      • by FooAtWFU ( 699187 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:02AM (#50011109) Homepage

        Because the value of gold and silver is somehow less arbitrary than electronic bank balances.

        Depends on who's running the bank, doesn't it? The value of gold and silver fluctuate with supply and demand worldwide. They have industrial and decorative uses and a widespread base of people willing to own them. In the absence of large-scale deep-space asteroid mining technology flooding the market with excess supplies, they're going to remain fairly valuable.

        A well-run bank can do much better (the value of its currency remaining approximately constant over time) but once you start instituting capital controls and swapping out the nice currency for shitty drachmas then it's another matter.

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        Tell me about the time in the last 2500 years when gold wasn't valuable.

        It has a value which has fluctuated over time, but it never seems to become valueless, either because of its history as a means of exchange, its intrinsic value as a material, or both.

    • The problem most Greeks suddenly face is that their money is now locked up as electronic balances in banks that have shut down for a week and won't let them have more than 60 euros at a time.

      They'd have a LOT bigger problem if there was a bank run [wikipedia.org]. Then a lot of them would have access to none of their money. Of course they could keep their money outside of the banks but that's got its own set of problems.

      After crises like this (even America's own "great recession"), people tend to prefer forms of money are more than just bits or fiat paper, such as gold and silver.

      Really? Go take a few ounces of gold bullion to McDonalds and try to buy a burger with it and let me know what happens. Furthermore whether you have gold or fiat currency does not affect whether a bank run can occur. Bank runs happened long before the gold standard was eliminated. While i

      • Greece has had that massive bank run, to the point of closing banks and imposing capital controls. As the primary problem with exiting the Euro is that it would likely result in a massive bank run, I think they should probably default on their debt exit the Euro. The cost has already been paid. But exiting the Euro will give them the tools to recover.
    • by Canth7 ( 520476 )
      Indeed, Greeks that have already moved their funds out of banks don't need Bitcoin and the ones that didn't don't have funds to purchase Bitcoin. With that said, capital controls are a concern for other countries besides Greece and at some point these warnings (Argentina, Cyprus and now Greece) indicate that it makes sense to keep a portion of funds in products that can't be easily confiscated, controlled or taxed. Bitcoin isn't going to solve Greece's citizenry's problems, but it sure could alleviate futu
    • The problem most Greeks suddenly face is that their money is now locked up as electronic balances in banks that have shut down for a week and won't let them have more than 60 euros at a time.

      That sounds reasonable compared to what happened when the US was on the gold standard......the government confiscated the gold. No 60 coins for you, it all went to the government.

    • by monkeyxpress ( 4016725 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @10:29AM (#50011845)

      Interestingly, the National Bank of Greece is one of the eurozone institutions that has the facilities to print Euro bank notes.

      Since November they have printed more than 13 billion euros of bank notes (against ELA funds) which Greeks are now storing under their mattresses.

      One wonders what sorts of contingency the EU has for this. It would be the ultimate middle finger to the EU if Syriza decided to solve the ECB imposed liquidity crunch by literally firing up the printing presses, yet a uniquely convenient thing to do when stuck in a currency union. Normally, the ECB could punish them by cutting of access to the TARGET2 settlement system, but this is basically already the situation now with the ELA funds running dry and capital controls in place.

      What a circus this could become.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:49AM (#50010973)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Just 2 years ago the legal retirement age in Greece was 57. I think it's been changed to 61 now and there was talk of moving it to 63, but generations of Greeks have been coddled and given so many handouts by the government that they are going to riot if they have to face reality. As you point out, bit coin can't solve the problem of an entire nation so addicted to entitlements that it can't accept any way out of the crisis that doesn't involve no changes or hardships at all.
    • What would exiting the Euro actually accomplish? Greek banks have been fundamentally reliant on the Emergency Liquidity Assistance funding since February this year, when the ECB stopped accepting bonds guaranteed by the Greek government as collateral for loans, following the direction that the general financial markets have been taking for some months previous to that. So the Bank of Greece would still need to borrow money from somewhere, and exiting the Euro doesn't make borrowing suddenly easier....

      • by neilo_1701D ( 2765337 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:28AM (#50011371)

        Exiting the Euro gives them some control over their destiny.

        A country that is in such poor economic shape generally has it's currency devalued. This has two effects: first, imports are suddenly more expensive; and second exports are suddenly cheaper for the rest of the world to buy. As the economic mess cleans up, you have a capital inflow into the country, liquidity frees up and things get better.

        Now Greece (or any other country in the EU): They don't have their own currency; they use the EU's. So they can't allow their currency to devalue; they are dragged along by the strength of the German economy, which effectively determines the value of the Euro. They can't control their economic destiny.

        Exiting the Euro may be the only option to give the Greek economy exactly what it needs: a savage, sharp recession to flush out all the inefficiencies and get back to making stuff and exporting it. Or just producing enough for domestic consumption; that'll do. Staying in the EU probably means that it's going to be a long, drawn-out and painful process.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          The EU and the Eurozone are different. Countries can be (and many are) members of the EU without getting rid of their national currency.

          Greece never even _really_ qualified for the Euro. They faked their paperwork and then apparently suffered amnesia and forgot that they were deeply in the poo, so rather than be very conservative and hope to ride the uplift from joining the Eurozone they spent like it was going out of fashion. Then the bills started to arrive. "Use those reliable tax receipts you've told us

        • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

          Good point. Tourism would flourish and exports would go up. Things like energy would also go up for those in Greece.

        • Only that Greece doesn't have much to export - mostly olives/olive oil and some seasonal fruit.

      • Part of the issue in the Eurozone is that countries have control of fiscal policy, as in how money is spent and taxes collected, but not monetary policy, as in how much money is supplied and to where.

        While monetary policy doesn't let you magic your way out of any situation (see Zimbawbe for an example) it can be useful. Have a currency that is weak or strong isn't inherently good and bad, but rather useful in different ways. So one country might wish to have a weaker currency, another a stronger one. Also i

      • by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:54AM (#50011591) Journal

        What would exiting the Euro actually accomplish?

        A lot. First of all, the money system could be in the hands of society instead of the other way around, as it is now. This could change the very definition of money for the Greeks.

        The current situation in Europe is that all the nations are under control of the European Central Bank. NOT the other way around, as the ECB is an independent institution. This independent institution however has the power to grab as much money from the nations as they want (through the "stability pact"). Even so, it is just a bank, but with the right to print money.

        Now you all know how fiat money is made, right? You have to give (well, promise) a valuable thing to the bank (the "security"), the bank puts in in the books, says "hey, we have an extra amount of money in the books!" and "lends" it out to you. I put the word "lends" between quotes, because it is not lent, but created by this bookkeping fraud. The money never existed before the loan. Off course, holding their laugh, the bank says that they are doing something risky by lending your own value out to you, so they ask usury. In Newspeak: interest. So, basically, you pay the bank to hijack your security.

        There is off course a downside to this piramid scheme: the usury that you have to pay extra has never existed and can only be generated by new loans! At some point you are lending so much to pay the usury (thus bringing more and more valuable items to the bank as security!), that loads get refused, and you will have to default or plunder even more resources to give away to the bank. That is where Greece is right now. The Greeks have nothing to loose, as they have been plundered to the bone already.

        Now what would happen if society itself (represented by the goverment for example) could issue money? In that case money could become "effort for the greater good of society" instead of "bottomless debt to an independent company". The government could pay "made up" money to people building roads, providing healthcare, etc. That money can then circulate further within society. The difference would not be that the money is made up (it is made up now also), but that money would actually get a real value. Off course, the goverment can always "unmake up" the money with taxes. But hey, taxes can be much lower. Instead of requiring high taxes in bank-debt to pay to road-building companies and to repay it and more to the ECB, the money can become its own tax! You pay in effort to society instead of in bank debt to the bank!

        Off course there is a catch: everything depends on how wise the amount of money is chosen to be paid to society. Too little, and society will issue its own currency (and pay in sigarettes, for example). Too much, and nobody will believe the numbers. Vary too fast, and the money will be unreliable. I really wish the Greek goverment a lot of wisdom.

        As an aside, if the government prints the money, they can set the rules as well. A ban on usury ("interest"), for example. Or a ban on speculation that is no more than a gambling game. Or even negative interest (some local currencies feature this) to encourage people to keep the money circulating.

        All in all, getting control over their own money is the best (and I think the only) option left to Greece.

      • by hjf ( 703092 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @10:07AM (#50011669) Homepage

        It would allow Greece to freely print money as it needs. Thus, trading "debt" for "inflation".

        This is what Argentina did back in 2001. We had our money at a fixed rate of 1 USD = 1 Peso. The country could only have as many pesos as we had dollars in the central bank.

        In 2002 we exited this scheme and made the Peso a floating currency. This allows the government to print as much money as they need to pay public employees and local suppliers.

        Is it a good solution? Yes BUT temporarily. You can live with inflation for a few years if you do things right, and use that opportunity wisely. Create industry, lay off government workers, and basically allow things to take their course.

        The problem is that Argentina has been abusing this for 12 years now. Instead of getting rid of government workers, they're taking more. They're also nationalizing railways and airlines (Aerolineas Argentinas operates at a loss of $1M a day). Instead of incentives for new jobs, they're giving away money to unemployed in "social plans".

        Reading the comments about Greeks I'm guessing they will do exactly what we did: Exit the euro, devaluate, cover salaries by printing more money. Take the unemployed into government jobs. Forbid utilities from increasing their price (but giving them "subsidies"). In 3 or 4 years Greece will be a FINE place to live. You'll see a lot of expensive cars in the streets, lots of new buildings, overall support for the government. The president will be re-elected with an overwhelming majority. And in 10 to 15 years Greece will be struggling again. How do I know? Because as an Argentinian, this is what i live with every day.

    • by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:50AM (#50011553)

      Trying to push bitcoin only shows that the author has a poor understanding and an agenda. While you could, potentially, argue bitcoin in cases where a country's currency has collapsed, or is unable to be used to buy things from other countries. Bitcoin is highly volatile, a very poor store of wealth, but it is something you can spend and transfer, in some places at least, and at present it has value.

      Well, that isn't an issue with the Euro. It is an extremely important and widely used currency, second only to the US Dollar. All Eurozone countries use it (by definition) which is quite a few major economies. As such it is also widely sought after in international currency exchanges. Euros are very easy to spend on the international scale. Many places will take them directly, and any bank will convert them.

      Also the Euro is pretty stable. When you look at it compared to other major currencies like the Dollar, Pound, and the Yen it compares very well. All fluctuate, of course, but not very quickly. So it is a good store of value, you don't have to worry about losing your money. Works long term too, as many nations with good credit will sell debt instruments in Euros.

      So there is nothing bitcoin solves here, because bitcoin is a currency and currency isn't the problem in Greece. This isn't Zimbawbe where the currency was worth nothing.

      The only way it could "help" is to move money out in the event of capital controls on Greek banks. But of course:

      1) You have to get the money out of the bank first, which a capital control can slow down.
      2) The only way it facilitates that would be being less traceable. As I said, Euros are taken everywhere, you can convert them to Dollars or anything else.
      3) Most importantly that wouldn't help the situation at all, it'd make it work. Might help an individual save money, but it would only worsen the situation.

  • by Tokolosh ( 1256448 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:50AM (#50010979)

    Ponzi
    Scam
    MtGox
    Not backed by anything
    No "Full faith and credit"
    Can't pay taxes
    Money Laundering
    Drugs
    Silk Road
    DPR
    >50%
    Gold
    Executive Order 6102

    Ok, now that is out of the way, we are ready to discuss the issue at hand.

  • by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:54AM (#50011023) Homepage

    ...he expected the price of bitcoin to rise to between $610 and $1,250 if Greece exits the Euro. The currency is currently worth $250.

    I know when my country is looking at economic collapse I'd look to move all my money into a currency that's going to double-quintuple in value nearly overnight. That's the stability I want and look for. Plus think of the literally 2 or 3 actual real retailer in the country that even know what a bitcoin is, let alone accept it for payments that I'll be able to spend my new found wealth

    • I know when my country is looking at economic collapse I'd look to move all my money into a currency that's going to double-quintuple in value nearly overnight.

      I'm buying food, fuel, guns and bullets. You can have all the gold in the world, ans I'm not trading it for my gallon of fuel.

  • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:55AM (#50011035)

    How is a jump from $250 per unit to between $610 and $1250 (an increase of between 244% and 500% against the dollar) any more stable than either the Euro (~15% fall over the Dollar during the past year or so), the GBP (~10% rise over the dollar during the past year or so).

    Something doesn't make sense.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Junta ( 36770 )

      Not to mention that 1Y ago it was $650 per unit, and was almost $1000 a year before that.

      So on top of a massive inflation over two years, they are saying they are so stable they predict a 200-300% deflation thanks to how awesomely stable it is...

      I don't understand how anyone can testify to the stability of bitcoin with a straight face.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No, you see, you are looking at it wrong. Bitcoin *is* stable, it's the other currencies that fluctuate wildly (yet almost perfectly synchronised with each other for some reason which probably has to do with them being fiat currencies).

    • Something doesn't make sense.

      The Euro is the go-to safe haven currency.

      The problem is that any Euros stored in a bank are liable to be seized and replaced with drachmas (greece leaves the euro, "grexit"), or possibly legislatively forbidden to leave the nation ("capital controls" - likely to lead to grexit). As you can imagine, these threats has led to lots of people withdrawing real Euros while they still can, depleting Greek banks of deposits, requiring emergency bailout/loans from the IMF and ECB. N

    • I think their (poorly expressed) point is that euros are more likely to be seized than bitcoins and become valueless. Going from 'value' to 'zero value' is less stable than wild value swings.

      I'm not sure that point is true either.
  • Austerity or... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by alex67500 ( 1609333 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @08:58AM (#50011057)

    The country can't pay its debts, and the upcoming referendum will decide whether they face increased austerity measures or start the process of exiting the Euro and face even worse austerity.

    FTFY.

    Leaving the Euro will mean that the country has defaulted, and whatever currency they put in place will have no value at all. The government will be bankrupt and will not be able to pay civil servants or pensioners. There are only 3 ways this goes:
    - Creditors accept to write-off some of the debt. They cut their losses and allow Grece to survive, in a situation which is actually bearable.
    - More austerity, from inside the euro. Hard times ahead.
    - Default. Chaos, Civil War.

    Humanity and Finance don't go together very well...

    • "Leaving the Euro will mean that the country has defaulted"

      Partially, yes.

      "and whatever currency they put in place will have no value at all."

      Absolutly wrong. It is wrong in theory, and it has been shown wrong in practice lots of time. It is not as if it were the first time a nation restorts to devaluate its currency.

      "The government will be bankrupt and will not be able to pay civil servants or pensioners."

      That's stupid beyond contempt. If anything, they will have zero problems paying civil servants or pe

      • by marsu_k ( 701360 )

        Not any kind of debt, but only the part that was fradulently imposed on Greece (Goldman Sach bonds, military over-expending and other fraudulent contracts).

        You are saying this as if these were somehow imposed upon the Greek. There were other players, sure, but it takes two to tango.

      • Greece needs to put as much effort and money as needed to put to an end to tax fraud, mainly from big fortunes as well as a stronger progressive tax law centered on direct taxes, not indirect like VAT as the IMF insists on doing. With only this, there will be no need to touch VAT, pensions, healthcare or education.

        This is extremely optimistic. But your post helps me understand the Greek viewpoint. They are in for some hard times.

    • by hjf ( 703092 )

      None of the 3 you described. Only a Sith deals in absolutes. Normal people reach a middle ground.
      See Argentina's economic crisis of 2001-2002 to see what hapens with Greece: a combination of Default (without civil war), debt restructuring (or writeoff as you called it), and lots of inflation to cover salaries.
      And just like in Argentina: it ends up bad 10 years later with "free money" for government.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Argentina defaulted, and while it was hard for a few years they have come out of it pretty well. If anything Greece should have done it earlier, rather than go through 5 years of pain and austerity only to end up doing it anyway.

      The Eurozone countries really don't want Greece to leave the Euro though. Apart from damaging the Euro itself, it would just encourage other countries to do similar things when times got tough.

  • It should read. "Is the Greek financial crisis an opportunity for Bitcoin?"

    And thus, the answer is "NO!"

    • by Canth7 ( 520476 )

      It should read. "Is the Greek financial crisis an opportunity for Bitcoin?"

      And thus, the answer is "NO!"

      Agreed, it's not an opportunity today. It could be an advertisement for Argentines or say Chinese concerned about the state of their monetary system and what that means for their personal wealth in the future. If 10% of one's cash holdings were BTC, worst case one is down 10%. In the best case, one is down 90% since the fiat is confiscated or worthless, but there is a hedge if BTC takes off. Localbitcoins.com - there's always a way to get some cash for your BTC. Can't always say that about your bank account

  • They vote is too late, they will default. Yves Smith over at NakedCapitalism lays it out nicely.

    "We described in detail how the referendum scheduled in Greece for next Sunday, July 5, is a cynical exercise in democracy theater. The Greek people are being asked to vote on a (draft) proposal by Greece’s lenders to unlock €7.2 billion in funds, the last portion of the so-called “second bailout” agreed by the Greek government in 2012. Tsipras knew at the time he announced the referendum that the proposal expired on June 30; that was the known-well-in-advance final date for the bailout terms to be agreed if each and every one of the 18 Eurozone countries agreed. We said it was a no-brainer that they would not agree; in Germany as with some of the other countries, it would require parliamentary approval to accommodate Greece’s too-late request, and there was no reason for any of them to cut Greece slack when the government has plenty of opportunity to schedule the vote in time, so it actually would inform the government’s actions.

    Instead, Tsipras has already taken the decision to miss the €1.6 billion IMF payment due June 30 and the €3.5 billion ECB payment that falls on July 20, while falsely telling Greek citizens that they have a say in this momentous choice."

    http://www.nakedcapitalism.com... [nakedcapitalism.com]
    • What he doesn't get is that the more Tsipras delayed the referendum the more time he gave for people to get their money out of their bank accounts.

      That's why it took so long.

  • An interesting article in Forbes (http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2015/06/28/so-greece-has-imposed-capital-controls-too-bad-its-just-for-the-normal-people/) makes the point that the rich and the smart money left Greek a few months ago, and it is Joe Sixpack that is trapped and going to get shafted.

    The only solution offered for this problem is to insist in future that politicians and bankers behave. Bitcoin is not mentioned. Take your pick, who do you trust? - political behavior modification or the

    • >> he rich and the smart money left Greek a few months ago, and it is Joe Sixpack that is trapped and going to get shafted

      Pretty much this, and there's been plenty of coverage for anyone who would listen, but I'll bet it wasn't on the evening TV news (or whatever "Joe Sixpack" consumes in Greece).

      "New Greek bank run begins" (Feb 25)
      http://www.naturalnews.com/048... [naturalnews.com]

      "'Slow motion' bank run continues" (June 17)
      http://www.forbes.com/sites/ti... [forbes.com]

      "Banks impose a 3,000 Euro withdrawal cap" (June 22)
      http://www [zerohedge.com]

    • by hjf ( 703092 )

      Political behavior: government solves problems for me and gives me free money.
      Bitcoin: cold, hard math.

      GUESS.

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:10AM (#50011181)

    One side effect of the crisis is that alternative currencies like Bitcoin suddenly look much more attractive as the "normal" currencies become unstable.

    Bitcoin will not be more stable or attractive than other currencies including the dollar or probably even the euro except in some weird corner cases. If someone is putting money into bitcoin because they think it is even relatively stable then they are an idiot. If someone wants to use bitcoin to transfer money then there is a relatively small risk there but you'd have to be pretty dumb to just buy and hold bitcoins for any substantial length of time. Even if Greece does exit the Euro it isn't going to make bitcoin meaningfully more sensible than it already is. If someone wants to swap currencies to hedge against currency fluctuations I can think of a huge number of options I'd consider long before bitcoin for that purpose.

    Tony Gallippi, the co-founder of bitcoin payment processor Bitpay, tweeted on Sunday night that he expected the price of bitcoin to rise to between $610 and $1,250 if Greece exits the Euro. The currency is currently worth $250.

    I rest my case. If it can go up that fast then it can (and probably will) go down just as fast. Bitcoin is not a place anyone should be comfortable keeping their money for long unless they are speculating.

  • Follow my links for free bitcoins and dogecoins!

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Strange definition of "free" you have there. It seems like they want some personal data and for me to labour away at some game in exchange for Bitcoins. Not what I'd call free.

    • WTF is that? How do you make money off that? Why would anyone give away free bitcoins? Nothing is free, after all.
  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:25AM (#50011343) Journal
    I realize that any instance of fiat currencies looking foolish is a happy day for the goldbugs, physical and virtual; but I'm not sure I follow:

    Greece has been part of the euro zone for a while now, any remaining pre-euro currency is just a collector's item, and has no value now and no expectation of gaining value as the basis of a post-euro greek currency.

    The euro itself will presumably do some fluctuating based on whether people are more nervous about the fact that the euro zone basically can't pull together when things look vaguely bad; or more enthusiastic about the fact that a weak member of the euro zone dropped out, leaving a stronger survivor group and establishing a precedent for (relatively) orderly drumming-out of any future weaklings.

    In any case, greeks who currently have cash holdings either don't need bitcoins(if they just put the euros under their pillow they'll still be able to drive into the nearest euro zone country and spend them) or won't be helped by bitcoins(their euros are just numbers in the ledger of some deeply fucked bank that is imposing withdrawal limits or freezes, so they can't get them to hide under their pillow or to buy bitcoins).

    A 'grexit' is actually more or less the opposite of the classic 'my holdings are in the dysfunctional currency of inflationistan; but capital controls are keeping me from expatriating them or buying dollars!' problem that bitcoin might actually be useful for addressing. If Greece drops out, all the greeks holding euros still have relatively hard currency, probably superior to whatever is introduced as a local replacement. They gain no obvious advantage from shifting euros into bitcoins, unless Greece bumps up their border controls into a veritable Berlin wall to prevent physical transport of currency; but continues to ignore online activity.

    This story just seems orthogonal to bitcoins.
  • Not just e-money (Score:3, Interesting)

    by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @09:32AM (#50011401) Homepage Journal

    Commodity-backed money, such as actual precious metals or precious-metal-backed-depository-receipts (or even gold-backed bank notes) from an institution that people trust, can be functional currencies in places where the currency is unstable and local laws or customs don't prevent it.

    Heck, even in the Untied States of America, the US Constitution specifically allows states to mind gold and silver coins and declare them legal tender. In practice, this is not needed because relative to the cost of most goods and services, the US dollar is at least as stable as gold and silver, and declaring gold and silver as "legal tender" while maintaining a floating exchange rate with the US dollar would mean merchants who took both would have to re-price things in real time to prevent arbitrage-buyers from disrupting the system. However, it the US Dollar ever has runaway inflation, the option for states to declare gold and silver legal tender would make the option of having "stable" prices in gold or silver and "adjusted-by-the-minute" prices in US Dollars attractive.

  • by plopez ( 54068 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @10:42AM (#50011933) Journal

    I keep asking this question and no one seems to have a good answer. How can an economy as small as Greece's; or for that matter Italy's and Spain's; send global markets and economies as big as Germany and the US into a tailspin? There is somethings very wrong with our financial and economic policies. All this tight binding of economies and fifnacial systems seems to be a recipe for disaster.

  • Pump and dump (Score:4, Insightful)

    by linuxguy ( 98493 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @10:45AM (#50011949) Homepage

    Not long ago, value of Bitcoin was around $1200. Now it is around $250.

    Anyone buying Bitcoin for stability is too stupid. Anyone suggesting that the value of Bitcoin is about to rise to $600 or $1200 is attempting to pump the price in order to dump their holdings.

  • This makes no sense. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by edibobb ( 113989 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @10:46AM (#50011967) Homepage
    If a Greek citizen can buy a bitcoin, the same person can buy Euros, Dollars, or stock index funds, all of which are more stable. The author of this must be either financially ignorant or hyping bitcoins.

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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