Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I hadn't realised that it had caused other companies to freeze withdrawals as well
Not going to bother - I've seen this nonsense from you before Duke. You know well that she's talking about the inbuilt monetary policy of Bitcoin that right now leaves it with an inflation rate of 1.8%.What a load of nonsense she talks. Bitcoin is an 1.8% inflationary asset, she hasn’t a clue. The price of latte in bitcoin has increased 300% in 10 months and that’s about the only commodity that trades in bitcoin.
yup, and they've not been the only place offering rates that seemed too good to be true. Look at blockfi.com for example, from right on their homepage:Did people lend them their Bitcoin and get 17% interest?
And they didn't think that was too good to be true?
Not sure, but at least some of them are loaning it out.What did Celsius do with the coins they borrowed?
You know well that she's talking about the inbuilt monetary policy of Bitcoin that right now leaves it with an inflation rate of 1.8%.
What is Celsius?
One of two things: It uses those deposits to finance collateralised loans. It also shuffles its way far out the risk curve into risky lending and staking protocols and money markets in DeFi (or crypto assets or derivatives that proved risky due to a lack of liquidity). It was one of seven account holders that are blamed for starting the run on the Terra stablecoin a couple of weeks back.What does Celsius do with them?
Can you, or anybody else, explain that in plain English please?One of two things: It uses those deposits to finance collateralised loans. It also shuffles its way far out the risk curve into risky lending and staking protocols and money markets in DeFi (or crypto assets or derivatives that proved risky due to a lack of liquidity).
I'll give it a go. (And you did ask - so you can only blame yourself!Can you, or anybody else, explain that in plain English please?
Hi ClubmanCan you, or anybody else, explain that in plain English please?
The lack of regulation in this space is shocking
There is no doubt whatsoever what Caitlin was talking about.
You can both scream blue bloody murder - I'm not having any of it. It's as plain as day that her comments were in the specific context of the circulatory supply of bitcoin - and how Bitcoin's monetary policy in that respect is coded in to the digital currency. As regards people here claiming 'she hasn't a clue', she spent 10 years heading up a division at Credit Suisse and another 10 as MD of Morgan Stanley's pensions business. Here's ETF and mutual fund manager, Van Eck using exactly the same terminology. linkAgree with Duke
But if someone shows that they don't understand the basics, then it's hard to place any credibility in them when they are talking about issues which I don't really understand myself.
Which is why it had been flagged from day one.Celsius seems to be securities lending for crypto, increasing liquidity and facilitating short selling. If anyone was prepared to give me 17% for using my assets when I don't need them, the risks associated with that would be worth understanding fully, and it wouldn't take much to go wrong with the market for you to be scratching around wondering how you can get your assets back. Securities lending never made it's way down to the average punter and only ever effecting institutionals, hedge funds, etc The lack of regulation in this space is shocking, and one (of many) reasons to avoid it like the plague.
I believe that those Ethereum-centric DeFi projects have been a wild experiment that I was quite happy to watch from the sidelines. I think its been riddled with hacks, scams and inadequately designed protocols. However, I also think that over the longer stretch, incredible innovation will emerge from it. I suspect its the reason why someone of Stanley Druckenmiller's stature tells John Collison that the blockchain space is the one to watch if you were starting out in the investing/finance game today. (Druckenmiller: "I will be surprised if blockchain isn't a real force in our economy 5-10 years from now". . . " challenging our financial companies and doing a lot of disruption").Not going to bother diving into things like "staking protocols". But my instinct tells me that Defi is like everything else in crypto space, 99% about speculation.
Conventional finance (CoFi) is about matching those what have the dosh with those that can put it to good use, a million miles away from DeFi, I suspect.
The rules baked in to Bitcoin are clear for all to see and beyond reproach. Bitcoin as a protocol is not in any way responsible for third party services built in its vicinity.Regulating something speculative like Bitcoin or a lender which pays 17% interest, gives it a credibility it does not deserve.
There may well be some that take that approach but that's neither here nor there as far as I'm concerned. Reason being is that this was flagged by all and sundry over a number of years at every turn.Those who will, inevitably, lose all their money, will claim that the regulators were asleep at the wheel, and demand to have their losses reimbursed by the taxpayer.
The only regulation they should have is that they should be required to post a prominent warning "This is a highly speculative gamble and is not regulated. You are likely to lose all of your money."
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