Bitcoin’s use in commerce keeps falling

Who’s using bitcoin to buy and sell goods and services?

A lot fewer people than you probably would have guessed. After peaking at US$411-million in September 2017, the amount of money the largest 17 crypto merchant-processing services received in the best-known cryptocurrency has been on a steady decline, hitting a recent low of $60-million in May, according to research startup Chainalysis conducted for Bloomberg News.

While the amount merchant services such as BitPay, Coinify and GoCoin received increased slightly in June to $69-million, it was still a far cry from the $270-million received a year ago, Chainalysis found.

Bitcoin advocates have long suggested the virtual money would one day replace fiat currencies as a means of doing business, but after a rise in use last spring, the cryptocurrency has lost what little appeal it had as a way to buy goods or services.

“It’s not actually usable,” Nicholas Weaver, a senior researcher at the International Computer Science Institute, said in an e-mail. Often, he said, “the net cost of a bitcoin transaction is far more than a credit card transaction”. And bitcoin-based transactions can’t be reversed, an issue when a merchant or a consumer comes up against fraud.

The decline in use for payments coincided with the spike in speculative investing that drove the price of the biggest virtual currency to a record high of almost $20 000 in December. While bitcoin’s price has steadied somewhat recently after crashing more than 50%, consumers still appear to be reluctant to use the digital coins for transactions.

“When the price is going up so rapidly last year, in one day you could lose $1 000 if you spent it,” Kim Grauer, senior economist at Chainalysis, said in a phone interview. What’s more, high transaction fees have made paying for small-ticket items like coffee with bitcoin impractical, she said.

In January, payment service Stripe stopped supporting bitcoin as usage declined and price swings intensified. A number of companies such as travel services provider Expedia stopped accepting the cryptocurrency as well.

That’s a troubling sign for some fundamental investors, who maintain the belief that the cryptocurrency has to be in use in the real world versus just be a speculative instrument to have long-term value.

‘Moneyness’

“Most people who are not bitcoin core maximalists argue that yes, you need people to use these things as means of payment to become money,” Kyle Samani, managing partner at Austin, Texas-based hedge fund Multicoin Capital, said in an e-mail. “Or as my co-founder Tushar likes to say, don’t think of money as a noun, but rather as an adjective. The more something is used as money, the more ‘moneyness’ it has.”

The way bitcoin is being utilised is changing as well. Because the fees to process a transaction in bitcoin can be steep and varied — they peaked at $54 in December, but are down to less than $1 today — not many people are using the coins for small transactions, like buying a cup of coffee. They are spending the virtual currency more to pay vendors like freelancers located overseas. For those cases, using bitcoin can be cheaper and faster than using traditional financial services.

“In the last six months, we’ve seen a large uptick in crypto companies paying their vendors in bitcoin, including law firms, hosting companies, accounting firms, landlords and software vendors,” according to Sonny Singh, chief commercial officer of processor BitPay. His company has seen a five-fold increase in crypto companies paying their bills from last year, he said.

Bitcoin faithful continue to buy bigger-ticket items such as furniture, and still the occasional sports car. At Overstock.com, crypto-based sales are up two-fold in the first half of this year versus a year ago, the company said. Top items bought with cryptocurrency include living-room furniture, bedroom furniture and laptops, according to the site.

Many people, however, are only speculating with bitcoin or selling off small amounts to convert it into a fiat currency, and use that to pay for goods and services. Long-time advocate Graham Tonkin said he converts his bitcoin and ether from time to time to cover credit-card bills.

“I assume many people are like me, where you won’t be doing your everyday transactions in it,” said Tonkin, who is chief growth officer at crypto finance research company Mosaic. “I don’t believe it fits the characteristics of money very well.”  — Reported by Olga Kharif, (c) 2018 Bloomberg LP

Source: techcentral.co.za