Bitcoin Bursting With Potential

Jeffrey Epstein is seen as royalty when it comes to the elite of finance, having been a billionaire for over 20 years. However, despite his traditionalist ways, the former partner at Bear Stearns has weighed in with his opinion of Bitcoin.

Epstein excelled at finding hidden value for his clients and himself, identifying anomalies in the market, and using arbitrage to profit from them. He has now identified Bitcoin as another potential opportunity.

Why does Epstein’s opinion matter?

There are a lot of Wall Street banks, bankers and investors who are sharing their opinion on the digital currency, some more politely than others. Jamie Dimon has called it a fraud, and on the other side, there are rumours that Goldman Sachs will begin direct Bitcoin trading.

However, these opinions are so polarised that they are either so deep in one camp or another that they seem to have hidden agendas.

Epstein’s opinion is fairly measured as he points out its potential, casting his math, science and technology background over it with a focus on finance.

“Epstein is the Brooklyn-born financier who in 1982 formed J. Epstein & Co., the money management firm that famously held a secret client list containing only the names of people worth $1 bln or more.”

Mathematically stopping counterfeiting

As a former math teacher, Epstein appreciates the security that comes from the mathematical work that goes into Bitcoin’s Blockchain.

Counterfeiting is a major problem with conventional money but because each Bitcoin has a unique identifier, and any coins numbered outside a certain range are fake — the whole system is mathematically controlled.

Still not a currency

While there is no formal or legal definition of what a currency actually is, Epstein does not think Bitcoin can be classified as one anyway.

Traditional currency is money that has a sovereign guarantee behind it, a governmental promise that the value is secure. But because Bitcoin is backed by technology, it misses that mark.

However, he adds that it works as a store of value:

“When we talk about gold as a store of value that just means a lot of people agree to pay the same price for one ounce of gold. In 2017, enough people agree on the value of bitcoin that it can serve the same purpose. There will only ever be 21 million bitcoins, but this limit comes from computer code, not by how many bitcoins are left to remove from the earth. If we learn tomorrow that half of Montana contained a secret cache of gold, the value of gold would decrease instantly. Bitcoin doesn’t have this problem.”

Call for an update

Finally, the billionaire sees Bitcoin as a powerful catalyst that can start to change the landscape of business and finance.

Terms such as currency, money, wealth, value and even cost need to be updated and revisited. He believes it is Bitcoin that can make people rethink these ideas.

 

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