Even an audited exchange like Coinbase that is trying to do everything right is still self reporting loses like $430M in quarter 1 of 2022 just by operating their business correctly.
Not your keys, not your crypto. Anyone storing their crypto on any exchange has this risk.
For many users of these exchanges their entire interest in crypto is speculation/trading, which requires them to store their crypto with an exchange so they can trade it because the costs associated with transferring to and from the exchange repeatedly would be prohibitive.
Money in general has transaction costs - even cash decays every time it changes hands. Is it all a negative sum game? It seems that in order to make that claim, you need to make some comparison between the value produced and the costs incurred. IMO, crypto is pretty scammy but there is some value (note that crypto is most popular in countries with unstable economies and corrupt governments). A crypto that’s optimized for lower transaction fees could be net positive.
Money in general are traded for productive goods and services, not other kinds of money. That's why it's not negative sum. If you had a bunch of people trading between USD and GBP amd EUR and doing nothing else, that would be negative sum and look an awful like what people do with cryptocurrency.
> If you had a bunch of people trading between USD and GBP amd EUR and doing nothing else, that would be negative sum and look an awful like what people do with cryptocurrency.
That does happen. About a decade ago I dug into FX flows. The trade in USD was eighty times trade flows.
FX is a nasty business, huge profits to be made, profits that can be multiplied by the slightest bit of undetectable (now the traders know how to cover their communication traces) fraud.
Cryptocurrency is pure scam, true. But, in my educated opinion, the international financial system is dominated at the highest levels by out and out crooks.
The state of international finance, how it works against its consumers and saps the life out of the very economic activity it fosters (economic activity at the level we have would not be possible without sophisticated financial systems) is a huge incentive for developing crypto.
I just wish that there was a better solution (even a viable solution) than crypto
Complex social and economic problems do not have simple easy answers.
The difference is that stock, at its core, represents a claim on a portion of the future profits of a business. The business is out there building widgets, supplying people with a service, extracting raw materials, whatever. Most coins are just hollow marketing gimmicks designed to move money around.
Basically all the DeFi ecosystem boils down to trading one coin for another coin, there is no productive work at the core generating value.
This is a textbook distinction, but when I look at my nasdaq and crypto candles, they all have the same 3-year profile, crypto just feels like it’s 1.5x leverage but that’s it. If stock market is all about production and long-term investment, then it shouldn’t bounce up and down with fear waves. The sibling commenter is right, just from the charts it seems at least 66% of “investors” are short-term players and no forward-looking company will (to my limited understanding) build a long-term strategy around these volumes. I mean, they will, but that only confirms the idea?
> The difference is that stock, at its core, represents a claim on a portion of the future profits of a business.
Wow, that's so real, concrete and down-to-earth :-)
> The business is out there building widgets supplying people with a service
Or perhaps not doing these things, but making performative presentations on how its groundbreaking unproven innovation is certain to bring in a lot of money in the future. Or a mix of the former and the latter.
> Most coins are just hollow marketing gimmicks designed to move money around.
One could argue that some, or many, publicly-traded companies - when one considers the listed trade value of their stock - are 10% real business and 90% hollow marketing gimmicks serving as parking space for speculators' money.
The past decade companies have sold debt to raise funds to repurchase stock to drive up stock price so senior management can meet their KPI and get a larger bonus.
This is useful activity for society because senior management deserves more money and they work really hard to earn it. /s
Stocks give you share of ownership over the cashflow that a company generates from its business. Theoretically, that is where the value of stock comes from. Crypto does not generate any cashflows (due to selling no goods or services). So crypto is not like stocks. If anything, it is more like commodities than stocks.
I don’t see one, but that’s a separate discussion. The narrow one is that every crypto-trader’s gain comes at another’s loss. Cash in and out of the system is entirely conserved across all timelines.
If they’re negative sum then so are traditional payment processors that charge transaction fees, which is not an argument I’d be prepared to make. Unless you see something fundamentally different about the nature of those fees in crypto?
It's because you can transfer money without paying fees, those fees are for convenience. You can not transfer crypto without paying fees.
Also, notably most banks will do SEPA transfers for free. There's nothing inherent in money which would make the action of moving it force giving a fraction of it to some other entity.
Indeed, the only disagreement I am aware of is whether the scam being run by multiple entities ("miners") is a significant difference to a Ponzi and so it's a new kind of scam (suggested name: "Nakamoto scheme") or the difference is aking to an LCD vs CRT TV, nothing significant and it's just a Ponzi. But the fact it is a scam is an indisputable and rather simple mathematical fact.
To quote Preston Byrne who coined the phrase Nakamoto scheme:
> The Nakamoto Scheme is an automated hybrid of a Ponzi scheme and a pyramid scheme which has, from the perspective of operating a criminal enterprise, the strengths of both and (currently) the weaknesses of neither.
Someone clearly has to pay to keep to SEPA infrastructure going, be it the banks crosssubsizing from profit on lending or taxes funding organisations in EU level.
Crypto fees are just much more straightforward. You pay a small amount to use the network and there are no strings attached, no hidden subsidy. In theory at least that is because most networks are still funded by inflationary payouts. But no one is forcing you to hold anything more than you need to pay for fees in the crypto currency at any moment in time.
Just like with most things crypto has been widely oversold and 99% of coins are basically scammy penny stocks. No one disputes this. But as someone who has moved internationally quite a bit I would LOVE for all my ETFs and bank accounts to live on an open Blockchain so I don't have to worry about migrating everything when I move to a new country. Even if I don't fully custody them, moving USDC through Ethereum or Solana is just 100x better than any international wire transfer. Stocks are basically stuck in whatever country you bought them in, I don't even want to know how difficult it would be to move my depot from one country to another. You'd have to sell everything.
>so I don't have to worry about migrating everything when I move to a new country.
Not sure what you mean. It's not significantly more difficult that it would be (and maybe easier) to be constantly transferring blockchain assets to local currencies/equities etc. ACATS makes the process pretty straightforward and handles most common financial instruments like stocks, cash, bonds, ETF's, and more. Then you're done, your entire portfolio transferred in a few days. Just choose a good brokerage firm in the first place: ACATS participation should be a prime criteria if you might move country at any point, ever.
Similarly, USDC/Ehtereum/Solana only seem superior to a wire transfer until you have to use them in a local economy. Then converting them to something compatible with the local economy isn't significantly better.
If you're imagining a future where local economies accept these things directly then I think that future is, at best, possible but mostly theoretical at this point. Crypto is not a major threat to sovereign-dictated monetary policy at the moment, and I suspect that the second it appears it might be then there will be rapid action to cut off that potential.
I don't see a way that crypto can bootstrap fast enough around such things when a government can, pretty much overnight, make every business own and retail cashier who accepts a crypto payment into a criminal if they so choose. Gray and black markets might still prosper, but it would make any vision of mainstream use, much less institutional use for things like inter-country investment portfolio transfers completely impossible.
> But the fact it is a scam is an indisputable and rather simple mathematical fact.
And:
> negative sum games and thus are scams
I don't think you know what the word "scam" means.
Merriam Webster defines it as "a fraudulent or deceptive act or operation". I don't think either Satoshi or Vitalik did anything deceptive or fraudulent.
Whether or not something is a scam is not a matter of "simple mathematical fact", but rather of intent.
Whether the operators of mining farms have mens rea is a matter for criminal courts. No one tried to sue them yet, perhaps no one will. Perhaps some aspiring DA will try. Who knows.
That doesn't change the fact they run the scam.
I wrote this up before but here it comes: if there's an empty room and a few people come, play a few rounds of a card game and then leave and the room is empty then it is obvious the sum of their money couldn't change. Some won, some lost but the sum is the same. This is called a zero sum game. If they decide to use plastic chips during the game and only use real money in the beginning and the end, nothing has changed.
However, if someone takes a cut every time the chips are being moved around then that person is guaranteed to win and the players in total are guaranteed to lose and a game where we know who wins without knowing anything about the game is quite obviously a scam.
Your only way to win is to hype up the game and sell your chips to an outsider who will now sit on an even bigger loss. Might not be realized yet but it is there.
That assumes that at the end of the game your bitcoins etc do not have a market value which does not accord with reality. For better or worse people value them like collectibles.
AMMs have solved this. The competition is amongst AMMs solving this better than they currently do. The need of custodial exchanges for trading is done. They can be just fiat onramps now as long as liquidity improves on AMMs.
I don't know any pro traders who use Binance but there might be some. Binance is popular with crypto kiddies, small time traders and they're also very strong in less developed countries that aren't served by any other major exchanges. People buying cryptocurrencies to escape high inflation or political risk. Basically a lot of newbies who aren't too aware that Binance is shady despite its size. But it's a diverse user base, they're not all active traders.
For now at least with Coinbase it is the investors funds at risk, not the customers funds. And that example shows how hard it is to run such a business profitably.
> ... with Coinbase it is the investors funds at risk, not the customers funds
Oh boy are you in for a surprise:
"In its quarterly report, Coinbase added a risk disclosure: if the company were to file for bankruptcy, the court might treat customer assets that the exchange is custodian for -- their Bitcoin, Dogecoin or whatever -- as Coinbase’s assets. And they’d be at the back of the line for repayment, forcing normal people, unaccustomed to the ins and outs of federal bankruptcy court, to claw back their money along with everybody else owed money by the exchange."
Here's the un-editorialized full text from their SEC filing:
> Moreover, because custodially held crypto assets may be considered to be the property of a bankruptcy estate, in the event of a bankruptcy, the crypto assets we hold in custody on behalf of our customers could be subject to bankruptcy proceedings and such customers could be treated as our general unsecured creditors. This may result in customers finding our custodial services more risky and less attractive and any failure to increase our customer base, discontinuation or reduction in use of our platform and products by existing customers as a result could adversely impact our business, operating results, and financial condition.
> Further, we place great importance on safeguarding crypto assets we custody and keeping them bankruptcy remote from our general creditors, and in June 2022 we updated our Retail User Agreement to clarify the applicability of UCC Article 8 to custodied crypto asset — the same legal protection that our institutional custody and prime broker clients also rely upon. UCC Article 8 provides that financial assets held by Coinbase are not property of Coinbase and not subject to the claims of its general creditors. In light of UCC Article 8, we believe that a court would not treat custodied crypto assets as part of our general estate; however, due to the novelty of crypto assets, courts have not yet considered this type of treatment for custodied crypto assets
Everything is literally editorialized (first by your brain, then by institutions). A charitable interpretation of the parent comment is that it is not editorialized relative to the original source.
See the full text from the SEC filing: "due to the novelty of crypto assets, courts have not yet considered this type of treatment for custodied crypto assets"
Basically, there's no legal precedent. It's anyone's best guess.
Go read FTX's statement to Congress from a few months back on why crypto exchanges should not be hobbled by all those old rules about separation of functions.
There's nothing prohibiting a crypto exchange from having a separate company to hold customer's assets. In a bankruptcy, the custody company should still be solvent. That's required in Japan.[1] Customers of FTX Japan still have their assets.
I work a lot with trustees that hold third party funds, there isn't a single one of them that would ever commingle funds to the degree that these exchanges do (or even any degree at all other than to separately invoice customers for work and fees), and all of the rules around such third-party monies should be mandatory for any exchange. But as was pointed out elsewhere in this thread even that may not be enough if an exchange goes bankrupt.
Basically, because cryptocurrencies aren't considered "money", and what they are is still kind of up in the air...and because, as so many of its proponents are so proud of (despite it being extremely obviously a temporary state of affairs), cryptocurrency is not yet subject to very many laws and regulations.
You can't have the protections of "money" without the regulations of "money". As long as everything was going fine and government was still dragging its feet catching up to technology, the people who got in early got to pretend there was something special about cryptocurrency that made it possible to have their cake and eat it too.
Now, they're starting to find out why that's not the case.
The disclosure isn’t a statement of what Coinbase would want to happen, but rather what a bankruptcy court might do. Bankruptcy law is very pro-debtor. An entity in bankruptcy court is like a Hoover, aggressively sucking any nearby assets into the bankruptcy estate.
This isn’t true in the case of bankruptcy. Note that in early 2022, Coinbase updated it’s disclosures to include that customer coins could be used as collateral to pay debts. That would leave customers as unsecured creditors (ie, stuck at the back of the bankruptcy line).
Essentially that they are most likely dipping in to support either their operations or other projects from the customer funds. That's not proof, but I would not at all be surprised if there isn't a single one of them that is clean.
I mean, being the custodian of funds actually costs money, one should wonder about the motives of the exchanges offering custody for the funds.
There are many banks in europe that will not open accounts for people who just moged there, unless they bring along plenty of money.
This simply means that having your coins on an exchange is the same a forfeiting them unless otherwise proven.
But the crypto exchanges double down on that, they speculate like the banks do, but with zero risk managment and oversight, the biggest accounting firms do not want to offer their services to them.
They have also leveled up their exit strategies, instead of the plain old run away, they run the business while they can extract money and then later they seek legal cover under the umbrella of bankruptcy laws.
> how did these exchanges get so large before anyone thought of audits?
Who said no one thought of this? There was simply no one to enforce this.
Look at Coinbase. They made a point of being “regulated in the US”. They’re audited. They’re legit (most likely. I’m not the auditor). They’re complying with disclosure laws as a publicly traded company.
Look at Patio11, he’s been publicly making claims about tether and the crypto ecosystem for years. If it all blows up and his speculation /research was right, then who is to blame? We’ll have years of boy crying wolf and we thought it was a sheep.
> If they’ve “debunked” the 27 year figure, then what is the correct average lifespan of fiat currencies?
The question is kind of ill-formed in the first place. Take the current US dollar. How long has it been around? Per Wikipedia, it was established by Congress in 1792, which gives it a sedate 230 years of existence. But given that the original analysis is by a gold bug, I suspect the intent is to limit it only to the 51 years that have passed since the end of the gold standard in 1971.
If the goal of the question is to work out how long a fiat currency not backed by gold will last before it's hyperinflated into nothingness, then it stands to reason that the metric which best reaches that conclusion would be in fact the earlier date: the Nixon Shock wasn't an episode of hyperinflation (inflation reached a measly 10-20% annualized). Events like the creation of the euro are even more starkly not relevant to answering that question.
There's also severe methodological issues with completely omitting currencies that haven't failed yet, which ought to be patently obvious. There's another severe bias in terms of the inclusion of currencies on the list, since there's going to be several currencies for which is there is likely insufficient data to establish the lifespan correctly, because records tend not to preserve very well after several centuries.
To attempt to answer your question, I don't have any hard data in front of me. But I would be shocked if the mean lifespan of a currency were substantially less than a century--there are several currencies that lasted several centuries during the Medieval period, such as the ducat lasting ~730 years.
I do broadly agree, the "27 years" figure is a rhetorical number that doesn't mean anything in itself. That said...
> If the goal of the question is to work out how long a fiat currency not backed by gold will last before it's hyperinflated into nothingness
That isn't completely fair. The ducat lasted ~730 years and preserved a reasonably consistent amount of value all through that time. Someone holding a dollar in 1971 has effectively lost 95% the value that they expected it to have vs gold. Even as demand for gold has presumably plummeted now that it is no longer officially involved int he monetary system.
Just because they are destroying the value of the currency on purpose doesn't change the fact that the value will be destroyed. It doesn't need to be an unexpected event like a hyperinflation - normal inflation is also enough.
> The ducat lasted ~730 years and preserved a reasonably consistent amount of value all through that time.
Not really. Inflation long predates modern times, there's a reason that the terminology is called "debasement" (adding base metal to gold coins). I don't have hard numbers on the value of the ducat (because that pretty much requires trawling historian journals I don't have access to), but judging from other coins that pop up, the annual inflation rate would have averaged perhaps 0.5% for the Medieval and Early Modern.
Why should a steady 2-5% inflation rate in modern times be considered destructive to value, but not the steady 0.2-1% of earlier periods?
> Why should a steady 2-5% inflation rate in modern times be considered destructive to value, but not the steady 0.2-1% of earlier periods?
Because they are different by an order of magnitude. Over a 70 year lifetime, at 0.2% inflation a coin is worth 90% of its value at the start of the life. At 2%, it is worth a hair less than 25% (at 5%, it would be effectively worthless because the coin has lost 97% of its initial value). That is quite a different outcome - one of those rates I could save using coins and not do too terribly in real terms.
Did the Reichsmark and Rentenmark fail when they were replaced 10:1 for Deutschmarks, losing 90% of their face value?
Yes!
You are cherry picking by choosing the Euro. The point is that valuation loss to currency printing is currency failure. The vast majority of currency “replacements” are just abrupt failures, and generally coincide with a country being overthrown by a new authority.
> Did the Reichsmark and Rentenmark fail when they were replaced 10:1 for Deutschmarks
Straw man. Nobody argued fiat never fails.
> vast majority of currency “replacements” are just abrupt failure
What is your source? You posted a statistic. A comment found it was based on B.S. You disagreed. I clarified the debunking argument. Now you’re throwing out straw men and a new unsourced claim.
Not a "straw man". It's one step back in history from YOUR example of the Deutsche Mark!
Again, the broader point is that measuring a "failure" as a total collapse vs. a replacement with a possible devaluation is the strawman.
Abrupt "failures" (or "replacements"... choose your euphemism) are noticed, but modern fiat currencies are constantly failing. It is easy to measure. The metric is currency debasement, what you would call "inflation" and what I would call "state sanctioned counterfeiting".
Prices also fell by 90% and everyone kept their savings with the Reichsmark, so I'd say no. Also, the Reichsmark collapsed because of the fall of Nazi Germany, it had nothing to do with the currency itself.
The Rentenmark was legitimately an absolute debacle, one of the worst of all time right up there with the Zimbabwean dollar
Bitcoin and other crypto is definitely not fiat currency, because virtually nobody will sell me a pack of cigarettes or a croissant for crypto currency.
Is there a central bank that can print or sell Bitcoin to stabilize its price? Is there a central bank that can set rates for BTC credits and deposits?
Well for starters they have over a thousand employees, plus office leases, plus I'm sure cloud provider fees, marketing, and more. There are expenses for sure.
It's definitely strange. Binance did $40 billion in volume in the last 24 hours. Even if their effective fee is only 1/100 of a percent that's $4 million. If we assume they do half that volume every day on average that's 730 million in revenue per year. Surely costs can't be that high?
> Binance did $40 billion in volume in the last 24 hours.
It didn't
> Even if their effective fee is only 1/100 of a percent that's $4 million.
It's not.
The reason? They "traded" fictitious currencies whose "value" is pure speculation and nonsense. Their fees are also denominated in these fictitious currencies.
However, neither the offices they rent nor the people they employ have any interest in these, because rent and salaries are paid in something that actually has value: the dollar.
Now, where does the actual money come from is a good question, but I'm too lazy to read their SEC filing.
I have calculated salary costs alone to be 30m a month at least. Could also be up to 80m, though, I have used the most conservative calculation I could reasonably come up with.
Then comes office infrastructure, if any and cloud assets.
Everything you hold a position in translates into risk on the books. If some of those positions (or even a majority of them) ends up losing you will need to make up the difference.
On top of that KYC and other operational costs really add up, and without another revenue stream than the transactions themselves it may simply not be enough of a slice to be viable.
Coinbase is like an empty casino with lots of employees, a solid vault, and no one at the table games. Binance is like a packed casino with few employees and about as transparent as mud.
It's really weird, because "typical" exchanges (NYSE, NASDAQ, CME, etc) typically charge like, what, a few basis points to trade? Coinbase is charging .60%, an order of magnitude of higher fees, and yet they're still somehow losing money?
Hiring a ton of silicon valley employees to make it really inefficient.
Seriously, though, the NASDAQ matching engine runs on a 1U server, and I doubt coinbase needs anywhere near that amount of processing power. Clouds just make it really hard to run a fair matching engine.
Not your keys, not your crypto. Anyone storing their crypto on any exchange has this risk.