Famed Economist Doubts Bitcoin Will Become Global Currency
Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic advisor at financial services company Allianz, says that bitcoin is not going to be a global currency and will not replace the U.S. dollar. However, he believes the cryptocurrency will al...
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic advisor at financial services company Allianz, says that bitcoin is not going to be a global currency and will not replace the U.S. dollar. However, he believes the cryptocurrency will always exist in the ecosystem and will not be regulated out of existence.
Bitcoin Won’t Become Global Currency Rivalling US Dollar, Says Economist El-Erian
Famed economist Mohamed El-Erian talked about the future outlook for cryptocurrencies, particularly bitcoin, in an interview with CNBC Monday.
El-Erian is the chief economic advisor at Allianz, the corporate parent of PIMCO, one of the largest investment managers, where he was CEO and co-chief investment officer. The Egyptian-American businessman is also president of Queens College, Cambridge University.
While El-Erian believes that bitcoin is a “very disruptive force,” he does not think it will ever become a “global currency” that rivals the U.S. dollar. He said:
I think it will always exist in the ecosystem but it’s not going to be a global currency … It’s not going to replace the dollar.
However, he also does not believe that bitcoin can be “regulated out of existence.”
El-Erian additionally revealed that he bought some bitcoin during the “crypto winter” of 2018 when the price of BTC plunged to almost $3,000 but did not specify how much he bought. “I felt compelled to buy it — I really did … I felt like I had framed it. I had this level, I had an entry point,” he shared.
The economic advisor held on to his BTC position until late 2020 when bitcoin regained the $19,000 level. However, he admitted that he misjudged when to sell due to “behavioral mistakes.”
He categorized bitcoin investors into three types. The first is “fundamentalists,” who are investing for the long haul. The second is professional investors, who are looking to diversify their portfolios, and the last is day trading “speculators.”
He explained that the first two types of investors are “really strong foundations for that market long-term.” However, he noted that he would only feel comfortable buying bitcoin again once some of the speculators in the market are “shaken out.”
He urges the crypto industry to engage with regulators sooner rather than later as crypto is becoming more mainstream. He said this will help avoid the regulatory headwinds facing internet giants like Amazon, Google, and Facebook. “When I speak to people in the crypto industry, I say you have a responsibility not to repeat the mistake of Big Tech. The big mistake of Big Tech was they didn’t realize they were becoming systemically important, so they didn’t engage in preemptive regulatory discussions,” he detailed.
Furthermore, the Allianz economic advisor warned:
Crypto needs to take seriously that there are concerns about illicit payments. There’s concerns about fraud. There’s concerns about stability of platform.
In August, El-Erian said, “The time has come for more western governments to stop dismissing the crypto revolution as some mix of illicit payments schemes and reckless financial speculation.” He added: “I tend to tell people: be really careful. This is an asset that wants to establish itself, but it can only establish itself if governments allow it to.”
Do you agree with the Allianz economist about bitcoin? Let us know in the comments section below.
Why this matters
This bitcoin story adds another data point to the current market tape and is useful when read alongside nearby source coverage.
Original source
Read on Bitcoin NewsRelated market context
Bitcoin’s rally has 4 weeks to get its Washington CLARITY catalyst before the clock runs out
The US Senate returns to Washington next week with 20 working days to decide whether the CLARITY Act, which is the most advanced c...
Ethereum is losing ownership of crypto payments as Base moves $565B in stablecoins
Stablecoin activity is becoming a contest over which blockchains move the most tokenized dollars. Visa Onchain Analytics showed th...
Lyn Alden: No Cavalry Is Coming for Bitcoin
Lyn Alden built her reputation by refusing to tell Bitcoiners what they want to hear, and her latest appearance on Natalie Brunell...
Everton’s pursuit of Celtic’s Daizen Maeda highlights how transfer market economics increasingly mirror crypto speculation
The speculative nature of transfer market economics may lead to inflated valuations and strategic bidding wars, impacting club fin...
XRP cleaned out leverage, now ETF demand has to prove itself
XRP’s late-June washout removed a major source of market instability: excess leverage that could have turned another sharp move in...
Bitcoin’s ETF comeback is relying on a $79B futures market betting the rebound holds
Bitcoin’s rebound above $63,000 is being helped by renewed ETF inflows, but the harder test will now be whether the liquidity bene...