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Crypto-currency good alternative but not safe

2018-02-27  Staff Report 2

Crypto-currency good alternative but not safe
Staff Reporter Windhoek-Although a good alternative to technological savvy consumers, the crypto-currencies is not as safe as it is touted to be and it is prone to hacking and therefore it is potentially vulnerable. This is the view expressed by Dr. Joachim Bald, a consultant based at the Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, who spoke at a public lecture on crypto currencies. The Bank of Namibia organised the public lecture, to specifically “unpack opportunities and risks presented by the ongoing craze around crypto-currencies as well as the block chain technology which underpins virtual currencies.” Bald said that contrary to popular beliefs that the block chain is a safe medium, the innovation has been hacked before and therefore it is potentially vulnerable. “The trading venues and exchanges are shockingly amateurish accompanied by crashes and huge spreads everywhere,” he said. Bald is of the opinion that because of the high volatility of crypto-currencies they are bound to crush. “They are a straight-up ‘pump and dump’ Ponzi scheme,” he said. Bald clarified the wide-held notion that virtual currencies are a form of money, arguing that the essential functions of money that of being a medium of exchange, a store of value and a unit of account may not be present in cryptocurrencies. He said that although cryptocurrency mining is a necessary tool to control money creation and keep the currency in scarce supply thus boosting demand, the emission gains (seigniorage) are squandered through time consuming and energy intensive computations. The Deputy Governor of the Bank of Namibia, Ebson Uanguta, stated that the new wave of technological innovations – called fintech – has accelerated change in the financial sector: “We need to be aware and fully understand fintechs so as to take certain appropriate and informed decisions,” said Uanguta. The Bank of Namibia published a position paper on Distributed Ledger Technologies (Block chain) and Virtual Currencies last year. The paper indicates that the Bank does not consider virtual currencies to be legal tender and a payment instrument in Namibia, and cautioned users to be aware of the risks involved. Trading in virtual currencies is not currently regulated in Namibia and thus individuals that engage in such trading would be doing so at their own risk. These include credit, liquidity, operational and legal risks. Further, the paper cautioned users of virtual currencies to be aware of risks related to Money Laundering and the Financing of Terrorism when engaging in the trading of virtual currencies.
2018-02-27  Staff Report 2

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