Last week I said:
It is commonly accepted to say the dollar is �printed�, but we can see
from this line of thinking it is really borrowed. There is a real borrower on
the other side of the transaction, and that borrower has powerful motivations
to keep paying to service the debt.
Bitcoin has no backing. Bitcoin is created out of thin air, the way people
say of the dollar. The quantity of bitcoins created may be strictly limited
by Satoshi�s design.
We referred to the dollar as being borrowed into existence, to make our
point that the dollar�s value is pretty firm, due to the struggles of the
debtors. By contrast, bitcoin is created ex nihilo (yes, yes, at a
limited rate and subject to an ultimate cap on its quantity).
A reader took exception to the idea, and asserted that bitcoin is borrowed
and lent all the time. We would like to address this, though first noting
that this reader failed to address our point. A bitcoin is not, itself, a
debt. It is not borrowed into existence. Now we will consider the reader�s
point whether there is any real borrowing in bitcoin at all.
The problem with borrowing a currency which its proponents tell us will go
up another 30 times (and which has gone up 6.6 times in the past year) is
that your payment is going up. Would you buy a house with a monthly payment
of $1,000 a month, knowing this payment would go up to $6,000 by the end of
the year and to $180,000 in a few more years?
That reader dismisses such concern by noting that all transactions have
risks. But this is not an ordinary risk. This is the risk of shorting a
once-in-a-generation technology boom. Anyone who borrowed bitcoin a year ago
at $585 would be bankrupt today at $3850. The last time we had such a craze
was the dot com boom of the late 1990�s. Few would have shorted the NASDAQ.
Perhaps nimble and aggressive traders, but certainly not ordinary businesses
who were just trying to finance building a new retail store or buying a
machine.
We say �shorting�, because that is the simplest and clearest way to
understand borrowing in a foreign currency. If you borrow bitcoin (or
Argentinian pesos) then you owe the return of that same quantity of bitcoin
(or pesos) plus interest. If you borrow to finance a dollar expense in a
dollar-generating business, then you have in fact established a short
position in bitcoin. You are betting it will go down, or at least not go up.
When it has gone up 660% so far and promises to go up another 3,000%, you
suffer huge capital losses.
Any dollar-generating business should borrow in dollars. That way its
short position is in the same currency as its long position. Its short
position is its debt, and its long position is its revenue stream. When the
currencies of liability and asset match, then the business has no net
currency exposure. Its risk is purely entrepreneurial�will customers want its
products at a price it can profitably sell them?
Thus we say that, in theory no one (except a bitcoin miner) should borrow
in bitcoin. And in practice anyone who borrowed a year ago is now certainly
bankrupt. Only a bitcoin miner has a primary bitcoin income. We say primary
to distinguish from something that is common today. Many businesses, from
Overstock to Expedia, accept bitcoin in transactions, but this is something
else entirely.
They are businesses with dollar expenses, and set their prices in dollars.
They just calculate a bitcoin amount, based on the dollar total in the
shopping cart divided by the current price of bitcoin. When the customer
pays, the bitcoin is immediately sold into the market, and the merchant gets
the precise dollar amount that it wanted. Typically, a third party earns a
small fee on the transaction.
The customer might swear that he paid in bitcoin. But that�s not accurate.
What really happened is four-party transaction:
- Customer has bitcoin, wants Merchant's goods
- New Bitcoin Speculator has dollars, wants bitcoins
- Merchant has goods, wants dollars
- Bitcoin payment processor enables parties #1 through #3
to transact by selling Customer's bitcoins to New Bitcoin Speculator for
dollars to pay to Merchant
The merchant who accepts bitcoin does not receive the bitcoin. The
merchant receives the dollars. A bitcoin buyer out there in the world
receives the bitcoin.
It is no different than if a money changer loitered near a merchant stall
in a market bazaar in the ancient world. A foreigner wants to buy spices, but
has the wrong kind of coins. The money changer figures out the exchange rate,
takes the foreigner�s coins and pays the merchant in domestic coins.
Only, today on the Internet, this is done instantaneously and without the
awareness of the customer.
We can think of only one kind of business with primary revenues in
bitcoin. A miner. A miner could finance the purchase of more computer
equipment by borrowing in bitcoin, as its income is in bitcoin. It has no
currency risk (and indeed would have a currency risk if it borrowed in
dollars).
Yet, this reader persisted. Bitcoin has a futures market now. Look at the
term structure, he said. Now, we were really interested. A futures market and
a forward curve! Hmmmm. :)
We did some looking around, and found some bitcoin futures exchanges. Each
is different. Settlement on contract maturity is not clear to us at this
point.
But one thing is clear. The purpose of these exchanges is to allow
speculation on bitcoin with leverage. They are not warehousing markets as we
see in commodities, coordinating seasonal production with year-round
consumption.
According to our reader, there is a forward curve (in 30 minutes of
Googling, we were not able to find a web page that showed prices of various
contracts perhaps because we are looking on the weekend). He offered (on
Monday, Aug 7) that when bitcoin was $3,370, the Sep 29 contract (53 days)
was $3,435.2. This is a difference of $65.20. Contango.
It is important to note that this is a dollar profit, to be made on one�s
dollars. If one had $3,370 one could use the bitcoin market to make more
dollars. One would simultaneously buy 1 bitcoin and sell 1 bitcoin contract
forward (about two months to maturity). One would end with the same dollars,
plus pick up an additional 65 bucks, or about 12% annualized. This 12% is not
based on any move in the price of bitcoin, and in fact one would have no
exposure to change in price.
Regular readers will note that this is a carry trade, which occurs
in the gold market all the time.
There is no way to start with 1 bitcoin, and end with 1.12 bitcoins. Try
to work out how this could be done. If you sell the bitcoin and buy the
future, that is a decarry. Decarrying would lose money (more than
carrying could make).
The bitcoin futures market would seem (we are taking the reader�s price
quotes at face value) to offer a rich interest rate on your dollars. We
assume this is because of the risks of these fledgling bitcoin futures
markets. Does anyone even know if they are calculating margin correctly,
segregating it properly, and managing the clearinghouse with an appropriate
level of financial controls?
If there were no risk, then anyone with access to borrow at LIBOR (about
1.25% for two month duration) could crush this spread. Instead of $3,435.20,
a two-month contract should sell for $3,377 (based on $3,370 bitcoin).
Instead of $62.20, one should be able to make around $7.
So as it stands, we see no real evidence of bitcoin lending and borrowing.
We looked and found one open request to borrow bitcoin (this borrower
says he will use the loan proceeds to buy machines to mine bitcoin).
We see that even if there is a working bitcoin futures exchange, it offers
a dollar yield on dollars, not a bitcoin yield on bitcoin. Like with gold.
The gold forward rate is not a gold yield. It�s a dollar yield to carry gold.
Gold offers an arbitrage that is not available in bitcoin. One can borrow
dollars, buy gold, sell a future, and lend the gold out to a business that is
using gold. As gold is a physical good, there are businesses that do things
to transform its purity, shape, and location. For example, refiners and
jewelers. It�s simpler and less expensive for them to finance their gold needs in
gold directly from Monetary Metals, than it is to borrow dollars and hedge
the price risk.
Thus, bullion banks perform the arbitrage described above all day long. In
theory one could do similarly with bitcoin, but that would only make sense if
there were bitcoin-generating businesses who borrowed in bitcoin.
And, back to our original point, the bitcoin itself is not borrowed into
existence. It is printed (again, at a controlled rate with an ultimate cap on
quantity). Therefore, bitcoin�s value is set purely by speculators only. So
long as speculators expect the price to keep rising, they will keep buying
and fulfill their own prophecy. When the chart begins to look ugly�all
speculators are looking at the same chart�then the price action will turn.
Behind each bitcoin, there is not a debtor bidding up bitcoin with the
products of his labor.
As of this writing, the price of bitcoin is now $4,150. This is a gain of
$780 from the time of our discussion with the reader! If one had borrowed
bitcoin at that time, as the reader insisted one could reasonably do, one
already suffers a monthly payment 22% higher than it was earlier this week.
We believe principles of economics can be examined and validated this
week. Find a concrete example, and see how the theory works out. If borrowing
a rising currency is hazardous to your wealth, what does that say about
bitcoin�s suitability for borrowing? When its price begins to fall again (it
has happened before) then the destruction occurs on the other side.
Borrowers� gains will come from speculators� pain (we insist it�s
speculators, not savers�bitcoin is not a suitable vehicle for savings).
�
The prices of the metals was up sharply this week, especially on
Wednesday. Was it manipulation? Yes, we know, we are not supposed to ask if
price rises are manipulation. Only price dips can be manipulation, and rises
are just nature taking its course. But we ask anyways?
Ok� no. No, it was not manipulation. We saw exactly the change in the gold
and silver bases that we would expect in a rising market. We will show graphs
of the basis, the true measure of the fundamentals.
But first, here are the charts of the prices of gold and silver, and the
gold-silver ratio.
Next, this is a graph of the gold price measured in silver, otherwise
known as the gold to silver ratio. The ratio moved down sharply this week.
In this graph, we show both bid and offer prices for the gold-silver
ratio. If you were to sell gold on the bid and buy silver at the ask, that is
the lower bid price. Conversely, if you sold silver on the bid and bought
gold at the offer, that is the higher offer price.
For each metal, we will look at a graph of the basis and cobasis
overlaid with the price of the dollar in terms of the respective metal. It
will make it easier to provide brief commentary. The dollar will be
represented in green, the basis in blue and cobasis in red.
Here is the gold graph.
The dollar fell this week (the mirror image of the rising price of gold),
now down to not much over 24mg gold. And the basis rose a bit, 11bps. Gold
became a little more abundant, but not a lot, at the higher price. About $28
higher.
Our calculated gold fundamental price rose about $15 ( chart
here ). About half as much as the market price went up.
Now let�s look at silver.
In silver, the move up in the basis is greater. Keep in mind that we are
approaching the expiry of the September silver contract, so a rising basis is
a move against the pressures of the contract roll which is ongoing.
Our calculated silver fundamental rose $0.46 (chart here).
Whereas the market price is up $0.80.
Speculators are pushing up the price a bit more than the firming
fundamentals would justify. Are they manipulating the price of the metal? Of
course not! All buying causes price to rise. And speculators are hoping to
profit (as they reckon it, in dollars) from the rise. They don�t care (or
mostly know) that the price is being driven more by speculators than by
buyers of metal. They just want to sell at a higher price than they bought.
Last week, we asked rhetorically:
So is the silver selloff over? It�s hard to tell. The fundamentals were
firming this week�the fundamental price did not move down much during the
move. -$0.09 from Thursday to Friday. On the other hand, speculators may be
putting in sell orders over the weekend and may decide to bail out on Monday.
Momentum can be self-fulfilling.
Clearly the selloff was over. Fundamentals beat momentum. It happens every
time, though the timing of the victory and the elasticity of the speculation
is impossible to predict.
One thing is for sure. If the fundamentals don�t continue to firm up
further, or at least hold at the present level, then this rally is doomed
like all of the others in the last 6 years.
� 2017 Monetary Metals
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Keith Weiner is CEO of Monetary Metals, a precious metals fund
company in Scottsdale, Arizona. He is a leading authority in the areas of
gold, money, and credit and has made important contributions to the
development of trading techniques founded upon the analysis of bid-ask
spreads. He is founder of DiamondWare, a software company sold to Nortel in
2008, and he currently serves as president of the Gold Standard Institute
USA.
Weiner attended university at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and
earned his PhD at the New Austrian School of Economics. He blogs about gold
and the dollar, and his articles appear on Zero Hedge, Kitco, and other
leading sites. As a leading authority and advocate for rational monetary
policy, he has appeared on financial television, The Peter Schiff Show and
as a speaker at FreedomFest. He lives with his wife near Phoenix, Arizona.
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The author is not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by Sprott Money
Ltd. The views and opinions expressed in this material are those of the
author or guest speaker, are subject to change and may not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Sprott Money Ltd. Sprott Money does not guarantee the
accuracy, completeness, timeliness and reliability of the information or any
results from its use.