Bitcoin Doesn’t Do Negative Interest Rates…
When growth slows in an economy, an increasingly popular method used by central banks to encourage fresh spending is to cut interest rates. Typically, banks make interest payments to those storing cash with them. A high interest rate will encourage saving and a low one should encourage spending and borrowing, driving new economic growth.Negative interest rates were first used in the aftermath of the 2008 economic crisis in Europe. In 2014, the European Central Bank cut interest rates below zero for the first time. The move was a response to low inflation and a severe debt crisis. Since then, other central banks, including that of Denmark, Switzerland, and Japan have all introduced negative rates.
Most economists predicted that Donald Trump would want lower interest rates going into the 2020 Presidential Election. However, he has today encouragement for the Federal Reserve to lower rates to below zero:The Federal Reserve should get our interest rates down to ZERO, or less, and we should then start to refinance our debt. INTEREST COST COULD BE BROUGHT WAY DOWN, while at the same time substantially lengthening the term. We have the great currency, power, and balance sheet….. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)
First President to call for negative interest rates. Medium term this is direct call for a debasement of the US dollar in an attempt to create excess growth into 2020 election. Federal Reserve "boneheads." Gold and Btc should benefit as alternative stores of value. — Dan Tapiero (@DTAPCAP)
A central bank will usually introduce negative interest rates in response to an economy becoming risk averse. At the moment, it seems premature that US investors will see Bitcoin as a true safe-haven and start to pour money into the digital asset in response to any impending Federal Reserve attack on interest rates.
Although Bitcoin possesses qualities necessary for it to be deemed an effective store-of-value asset, it seems far fetched to believe that there is enough collective trust for the asset to become a viable alternative to holding money at a bank just yet. In the eyes of the world (and rightly so), it’s still a huge risk asset. It offers something so radically different from any other form of money. Distrust and scepticism is natural. However, Bitcoin can overcome these hurdles by just continuing doing what it is doing.It’s important to remember that this is still very early days in the Bitcoin story. Provided the network continues to function as it has been doing, public trust in the cryptocurrency will grow. As trust grows, Bitcoin’s market capitalisation will swell. This will make it even more effective as a means of storing value. A larger market capitalisation will eventually mean that a lot more money is needed to move the price in the kind of swings synonymous with cryptocurrency markets today.
Related Reading: Can Bitcoin Bulls Fend Off a BTC Drop to $6,000? Yes, and Here’s Why
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