Bitcoin's Price Rocket is Bringing Out New Prophets of Doom: Nobel Economist, Vanguard Founder, Fed Governor

Curiously, bitcoin’s success has brought out new prophets of doom (few below 60 years of age though), and the digital asset’s price only fuels their predictions: Nobel Prize-winning economist wants it outlawed, a legendary investment guru says it’s a plague, and a Federal Reserve Governor worries financial stability itself might be at risk.

Also read: Egypt Finance Attorney General Calls for International Governance of Bitcoin

Nobel Economist of Doom

Indignant, hands falling to the table in a plunk, Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz attempted to set the Bloomberg London anchoress straight. She asked, “If bitcoin were to be regulated, could it be viable?”

Stammering, Mr. Stiglitz answered, “One of the main functions of government is to create currency. And bitcoin is successful,” he half-smiled, “only because of its potential for circumvention, lack of oversight.”

Joseph Stiglitz is what anyone would call well-pedigreed. The man has awards and positions of distinction in his field: beyond his Nobel Prize, he’s earned a Bates Medal, was chief economist at the World Bank, was once chair of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors, and is presently a professor at Columbia.

The 74 year old Keynesian continued, “So it seems to me [bitcoin] ought to be outlawed. It doesn’t serve any socially useful function. We ought to just go back to what we always have had.”

His right hand began to wave at the screen, “This is just a bubble … It’s a bubble that is going to give a lot of people a lot of exciting times as it rides up and then goes down.”

Another interviewer compared the digital asset to tulips, asking Professor Stiglitz to chime-in. “Precisely,” he nodded. “The value of a bitcoin today is expectations of what the bitcoin will be tomorrow. [The government] could close it down at any moment, and then it collapses,” he warned.

Index Investing Guru Sees Bitcoin as a Plague

“Avoid bitcoin like the plague. Did I make myself clear?” Jack Bogle, founder of Vanguard Group Inc., told an audience at a Council on Foreign Relations gathering (see video). “Bitcoin has no underlying rate of return,” he explained.

Mr. Bogle is 88 years old, and began investing in the mid-1970s. He championed index funds, which allowed those with relatively limited means to buy an entire listing of companies, thereby distributing risk and lessening the need for expensive managers.

“You know bonds have an interest coupon,” Mr. Bogle continued, “stocks have earnings and dividends, gold has nothing. There is nothing to support bitcoin except the hope that you will sell it to someone for more than you paid for it. Bitcoin may well go to $20,000 but that won’t prove I’m wrong. When it gets back to $100, we’ll talk,” he dismissed.

Federal Reserve Governor Worries about Financial Stability

“While these digital currencies may not pose major concerns at their current levels of use, more serious financial stability issues may result if they achieve wide-scale usage,” Federal Reserve Governor Randal Quarles, 60, said

He further explained bitcoin’s volatility and “the resulting price risk and potential liquidity and credit risk pose a large challenge for the system.” Just this week rumors circulated the Fed might itself be looking to produce a crypto coin. Mr. Quarles seemed skeptical. “I believe the financial industry is increasingly recognizing that we should separate the concept of digital currencies from the innovative new technologies that they have employed to transfer assets,” Quarles said. What are your thoughts on this new round of bitcoin doom prophets? Tell us in the comments below! Images courtesy of: Pixabay, Wiki Commons. Get our news feed on your site. Check our widget services.