Technology
Bitcoin Not A Real Currency, Says UBS Chairman

His comments came days after Goldman Sachs confirmed it was weighing a new trading unit dedicated to crypto-currencies.
The chairman of the world's largest wealth manager has questioned
bitcoin's validity as a currency, the latest in a choir of
voices to express scepticism about the controversial
crypto-currency.
“I get often asked why I'm so sceptical about bitcoin; it
probably comes from my background as a central banker,” Axel
Weber, chairman of UBS and
former Bundesbank president, said at a conference organised by
the Swiss Finance Institute.
“The important function of a currency is, it's a means of
payment, it has to be generally accepted, it has to be a store of
value and it's a transaction currency. Bitcoin is only a
transaction currency.”
Still, he was more upbeat on blockchain, the technology
underpinning bitcoin and other crypto-currency transactions, and
said that over time the idea of a digital ledger would be widely
accepted by banks and other financial institutions.
Weber's comments about bitcoin chimed with slurs made by JP
Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon, who called the
crypto-currency a “fraud”.
Both touts contrasted, however, Goldman Sachs' CEO Lloyd
Blankfein, who earlier this week tweeted: “Still thinking about
#Bitcoin. No conclusion – not endorsing/rejecting. Know that
folks were skeptical when paper money displaced gold.”
Blankfein's tweet followed a report
by this publication that his bank was weighing a new trading
operation dedicated to crypto-currencies, potentially breathing
new life into bitcoin which has suffered price dips as of
late.
Bitcoin was spawned in 2009 by an unidentified person or group
operating under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. In the wake of
the 2008 financial tsunami, so-called “cypherpunks” sought to
create a decentralized payment system independent of distrusted
central banks and free of regulatory burden.
While banks have generally steered clear of bitcoin, the
crypto-currency has gained the support of some money managers,
technology enthusiasts and speculators wooed by its price
swings.
Its price has rocketed this year, from $969 per coin to as much
as $5,000 at its peak. Ethereum, another crypto-currency, has
traded as high as $400 after ending 2016 at $8. There are nearly
$150 billion worth of crypto-currencies in circulation, with
bitcoin accounting for over $73 billion of this.
Bitcoin was up 1.93 per cent at the time of writing (14:18,
5/10/2017), trading at $4,307 per coin, according to CoinDesk.
Over the past week, the crypto-currency has traded at lows of
$4,049 and highs of $4,458, highlighting its volatility.