Chart Of The Day: Why Bitcoin Is About To Fall...Again

 | Feb 20, 2018 10:01

Bitcoin has reached an intersection of sorts, caught between positive and negative forces both fundamentally and technically.

On the positive side, Bitcoin's technology is improving. The cryptocurrency's network is integrating SegWit (Segregated Witness) into its platform. SegWit will enable a separation of signature data from transactions, providing more space for additional transactions on the blockchain. This will allow for a more efficient transfers, which in turn will lower fees.

However, on the negative side, regulators (who are still cleaning up the recent financial fiasco that was the binary options industry) are taking no chances with cryptocurrencies, making sure every necessary precaution is considered. Over the past few months, digital currencies have subject to character attacks from a wide array of sources. Attackers have include financials such as UBS, S&P Global Ratings and Yves Mersch, an ECB senior member, who advocated clamping down on cryptos.

Earlier in the month, Augustin Carstens, general manager of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), also known as the bank for central banks, as it holds their accounts, called Bitcoin a “combination of a bubble, a Ponzi scheme and an environmental disaster.”

Adding to the mounting list of crypto-naysayers, today, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney told students at London Regent’s University that Bitcoin has failed to qualify as currency since currencies are measured by two essential criteria: they must be a medium of exchange and a store of value – both of which Bitcoin lacks.

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