Crypto evangelists promise heaven on earth, using an illusory narrative of ever-rising crypto-asset prices to maintain inflows and thus the momentum fuelling the crypto bubble.
170 years ago Americans pushed westward across the frontier to seek
their fortune in the gold rush. Greed and lawlessness turned this
promised land into the Wild West, where the few exploited the dream of
the many.
Fast-forward a century and a half and, amid the global
financial crisis, growing distrust of banks, coupled with technological
innovation, gave rise to a new dream – a digital gold rush beyond state
control.
Satoshi Nakamoto – or rather the software developers
using that pseudonym – created the source code of what they thought
could be decentralised digital cash. Their 2008 white paper
shows a great fascination with technology, notably cryptography, but
not necessarily an in-depth understanding of payment and money issues.
They aspired to realise an anarchistic utopia of a stable currency free
from public scrutiny.
Almost 15 years on, crypto-assets are what
everyone’s talking about. Crypto enthusiasts marvel at the rise of the
crypto market, with many feeling they should take their chances on the
crypto gamble. An ecosystem has emerged, from miners to intermediaries,
all seeking to expand into digital finance. Crypto evangelists promise
heaven on earth, using an illusory narrative of ever-rising crypto-asset
prices to maintain inflows and thus the momentum fuelling the crypto
bubble.
But appearances are deceptive. Satoshi Nakamoto’s dream of creating trustworthy money remains just that – a dream.
Crypto-asset transfers can take hours to process. Their prices fluctuate wildly. The supposedly anonymous transactions leave an immutable trail that can be traced.
A large majority of crypto holders rely on intermediaries, contrary to
the avowed philosophy of decentralised finance. In El Salvador, for
instance, which is the first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender,
payments are carried out via a conventional centrally managed wallet.
Crypto-assets
are bringing about instability and insecurity – the exact opposite of
what they promised. They are creating a new Wild West.
To quote Littlefinger from Game of Thrones, “chaos is a ladder”. The
story does not end well for this character. However, it only takes a few
to climb high on the ladder – even if their gains are only temporary –
to convince many others that they are missing out.
Indeed,
the crypto market is now larger than the sub-prime mortgage market was
when – worth USD 1.3 trillion – it triggered the global financial
crisis.
And it shows strikingly similar dynamics. In the absence of adequate
controls, crypto-assets are driving speculation by promising fast and
high returns and exploiting regulatory loopholes that leave investors
without protection. Limited understanding of risks, fear of missing out
and intense lobbying of legislators drive up exposures while slowing
down regulation.
We must not repeat the same mistakes by waiting
for the bubble to burst, and only then realising how pervasive crypto
risk has become in the financial system. And while some may hope to be
smarter and get out in time, many will be trapped.
Now is the time
to ensure that crypto-assets are only used within clear, regulated
boundaries and for purposes that add value to society. And it is time
for policymakers to respond to the people’s growing demand for digital
assets and a digital currency by making sovereign money fit for the
digital age.
Today I will argue that at present crypto-assets are
not only speculative and high-risk investments, but they also raise
public policy and financial stability concerns. I will then discuss some
elements of the public policy response which is necessary in order to
protect investors and preserve financial stability without suffocating
innovation.
The rise of crypto-assets
Let me start with the underlying drivers of crypto-assets.
At
their root, crypto-assets are the result of advances in cryptographic
methods and distributed ledger technology. Innovation has made it
possible to create an asset that lacks any underlying claim. In the
initial set-up of what we today call “unbacked crypto-assets”, nobody is
liable, nor are these assets backed by any collateral or managed by a
trustworthy operator. This makes them purely speculative in nature, and
hence highly volatile.
To address the risks of unbacked cryptos,
“stablecoins” have emerged, with their value linked to one or more
low-risk assets. But, if left unregulated, they are stable in name only.
In fact, they can be low-risk but not riskless, and cannot guarantee redeemability at par at any time.
They do not benefit from deposit insurance, nor do they have access to
central bank standing facilities. They are therefore vulnerable to runs.
They are often purely speculative assets, exposed to high financial and
operational risks: research finds that one-third of stablecoins
launched in recent years have not survived.
In
spite of these weaknesses, the number of crypto-assets has expanded
significantly, with around 10,000 available on the market today.
more at ECB
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