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Are crypto-currencies the 21st century’s biggest fraud?


Johannesburg, 13 Jul 2020

As of 5 May 2020, Tether was the world’s most purchased crypto-currency, with $56.16 billion in 24-hour trade volume. However, Tether did not appear in the list of top five crypto-currencies by daily transactions in the same period, nor in the first quarter of the year.

In the first quarter of 2020, Ethereum was the most used crypto-currency, with an average of 753.51 thousand transactions daily – more than twice the number of its more commonly known rival Bitcoin, which saw only 298.98 thousand daily transactions in the same period. Other leading crypto-currencies saw less than a tenth of the daily volume of Ethereum.

And yet, says Richard Firth, CEO of MIP Holdings, crypto-currencies have been punted as the precursors to a fundamental shift in how financial transactions are managed, with the underlying technology, blockchain, being promoted as a means to ensure faster and more secure transactions. “There is no doubt that blockchain has the potential to enable a much more efficient way to conduct transactions, but there are still a number of challenges that are being ignored by those that are promoting it as ‘the future of financial services’. One of these is the fact that the soaring popularity of crypto-currency and blockchain has overtaken its ability to cope with the demand, and fees are becoming expensive as a result.”

He adds that the benefits offered by blockchain as a technology have been somewhat eclipsed by the media around crypto-currencies, leading many people to conflate the two. The volatility of crypto-currency markets has put added pressure on the entire ecosystem, especially since crypto-currencies are riding a wave of perceived value. Without something “real” to back them up (like the FIAT currencies), the perception of value can be extremely fickle, and thus volatile, Firth says.

Crypto-currencies use peer-to-peer technology, relying on distributed networks to enable all functions such as currency issuance, transaction processing and verification. If these networks see a spike in activity, this affects the blockchain’s transactional capabilities as well the values of the crypto-currency.

“Since its inception in 2010, Bitcoin was the first digital asset to see extreme fluctuations in price, rising to nearly $20 000 per coin in 2017, but then steadily declining to between $3 500 and $4 000. The other crypto-currencies have seen similar peaks and troughs, which is why Tether is so popular with investors. Tether is the world’s most used stablecoin, a category of tokens that seek to avoid price fluctuations, often through pegs or reserves,” Firth explains.

“Some economists predict a big change is coming as more people buy crypto-currencies, with rumours about some of them even being floated on the Nasdaq. However, the same decentralised structure that makes blockchain transactions so fast, and the reason that crypto-currencies are generated and used the way they are, makes them the main currency used for a host of illegal activities, including money laundering, drug peddling, smuggling and weapons procurement. In fact, leaders at the last World Economic Forum event held at Davos stated that more than 50% of all crypto currency transactions happen on the black market,” he says.

“The other side to this coin is that because the ledger persists through blockchain, it leaves a trace of transactions that law enforcement can trace, which cash does not. Patterns can be detected and then when criminals aren’t as smart as they think they are, they expose themselves and get caught. Unfortunately, the pace at which criminals can transact with digital currencies far outpaces the rate in which law enforcement can catch up with them.”

Firth adds that he believes crypto-currencies are the 21st century’s greatest fraud. “Their use is limited to transactions, which makes them more vulnerable to the bubble-like collapses we have been seeing. In addition, crypto-currency’s energy-intensive verification process is less efficient than systems that rely on a trusted central authority like a central bank. I believe that the journalists and analysts who bought into the concept in the early days had a vested interest in growing the popularity of crypto-currencies, because the entire system relies on increasing volumes of miners and transactions.”

He points out that, from a technical perspective, there is no reason for the massive interest we have seen in crypto-currencies, mainly because the technology still hasn’t found a use case where it is the best and cheapest option. Add to that the fact that the primary customer base of all crypto-currencies is organised crime syndicates, and Firth says the growing worldwide interest seems to be merely a function of the publicity crypto-currencies have received over the past decade.

“Regulators have been trying to bring crypto-currencies under their control for years, but so far, none have succeeded. They are still being used for anonymous illegal transactions, and are still based on simulated values. Without the backing of the so-called crypto-evangelists, would crypto-currencies have become as mainstream as they are now? I suspect not.”

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MIP Holdings

MIP’s 400-strong team are leading engineers of affordable software administration solutions to the financial services industry as measured by the 22,000,000+ beneficiaries currently under management.

MIP is one of the world's only software companies delivering solutions across multiple financial service verticals. Our technology solutions and services are diversified to accommodate the specialised administration needs of policy holders under our Individual Life & Risk Insurance; Group life & Risk Insurance; Lending; Funds, Benefits and Annuities Administration and Healthcare, Risk & Funding Insurance portfolios. Also, MIP provides outsourced software engineering and consulting development services to help any business overcome the key challenges of modernisation and digital transformation in an ever-changing world!

Through our Research and Innovation unit, we have pre-built “Platforms-as-A-Service” that cater for mobile app solutions, MIP’s Digital Stack, a plug and play enabler for digital transformation, and Near Real Time big data feeds.

MIP is currently a Level 3 B-BBEE contributor.

Read more about MIP's Digital Stack on the Web site: www.mip.co.za.

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