What JPMorgan Gets Wrong About Bitcoin In El Salvador

JPMorgan analysts have shared their views on the adoption of bitcoin as a legal currency in El Salvador, reported Market Insider. The bank portrays the move as a “problematic experiment,” demonstrating a high-time preference rationale and a profound lack of understanding of Bitcoin and its incentives.

“El Salvador’s ill-conceived experiment should not be critical for the future of bitcoin or cryptocurrencies,” the analysts said. “Crypto markets suffered from El Salvador’s glitches this week, but that was from a frothy backdrop.”

Volatility? That’s Old News Already, JPMorgan

The analysts also explained why they believe that Bitcoin is unlikely to unseat the dollar or even equalize it as a parallel currency in El Salvador. JPMorgan claimed bitcoin isn’t suitable to be used as a currency due to its high volatility and the fact that it “isn’t backed by anything.”

However, JPMorgan falls short of understanding that volatility is inherent to Bitcoin’s current early adoption phase. It can’t be forgotten that the peer-to-peer monetary network was created only over a decade ago and is only recently becoming a widely accepted store of value. The move by El Salvador is a leap into uncharted territory, bringing the promising but nascent money into the front stage for testing its usage as a lawful medium of exchange in a country. As worldwide adoption increases, volatility will decrease.

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