Barclay Equity Research, a division of the Barclay Investment, just released a thirty-page report on cryptocurrency that states we have reached the peak and there is no way to go down except down.

I can’t link to the report as it’s a private document, but if you can get your hands on it I do recommend reading the first half of the report at a minimum. And the Economist comments on it here.

I quite enjoyed reading the first ten pages of the report which gives a short summary of the history of “private” money of the last five hundred years, such as the introduction of bills of exchanges and the discount rate of dollars bills issued by U.S. banks in the 19th century.

But I disagree with the conclusion.

Barclays is bearish on the future of cryptocurrency for two reasons:

1. Suppression of cryptocurrency by sovereign governments because of the threat to “seigniorage,” which is revenue remitted to government by the banks issuing (printing) money to put into circulation. For example, in 2015, the Federal Reserve remitted $100 billion to the U.S. Treasury. (Plain English translation: The Fed printed an extra $100 billion U.S. dollars and handed it over to the American government).

2. Crypto-coins as a threat to themselves. The report notes that the theoretical supply of digital coins is “infinite.” Somebody can always come along and create a new coin, thereby driving down the value of pre-existing coins. In the long run, infinite inflation can lead to a crisis of confidence in all cryptos.

If you plan on becoming a serious (or even semi-serious) investor, it’s worth becoming very familiar with these arguments, as they have been circulating in the crypto-community for years. Related: Will Blockchain Stocks Ever Bounce Back?

I can’t sensibly refute a thirty-page report in several paragraphs. But I can say these are interesting theories but what is happening in real world?

And in the real world, cryptocurrency is doing quite well in at least one industry.

This Industry Will Make $50 Billion This Year

When people learn what I do for a living, the most common question I get asked is: “Yes but what is Bitcoin used for?”

And I answer: Gambling. Or, to be more specific, online gambling.

How big is online gambling? It’s really, really big:

Size of the online gambling market from 2009 to 2020 (in billion U.S. dollars)

(Click to enlarge)

https://www.statista.com/statistics/270728/market-volume-of-online-gaming-worldwide/

In 2018, revenue from online gaming is estimated to $52 billion USD. But that is just the profit of the online gaming sites. The amount of money wagered in online gaming sites was estimated to be $550 billion USD in 2016 and to approach $1 trillion USD in 2021, according to Juniper research.

Now is here literally the trillion-dollar question: what percentage of online gaming patrons use cryptocurrency (or to be specific, Bitcoin) to wager?

A Bloomberg Intelligence report gives us a clue:

“Cryptocurrency-funded gambling is on the rise for offshore bookmakers, with more than 40 percent of online bets funded via cryptocurrency at one of the largest and best-known online sports betting sites. Related: Apple: The World’s Most Underappreciated Stock?

“The site reported that only 10 percent of customers used cryptocurrencies for deposits in 2015, and only 8 percent of users chose cryptocurrencies to receive withdrawals the same year.”

The report focuses on the website Bookmaker.eu which is considered one of the top 5 sports betting sites in the world. By the end of 2017, 42 percent of the customers had used cryptocurrency for deposit and 82 percent had chosen crypto to receive withdrawals. And here is the shocking bit of the article: By the end of 2018, owners of the website expect both deposits and withdrawals to be 100 percent crypto.

To summarize: the amount of money wagered in online gambling worldwide is $550 billion USD. Market cap of all cryptocurrencies is $325 billion. Expected penetration of cryptocurrency as the currency of choice for online gambling is close to 100 percent.

It looks to me like just the online gambling industry will be a significant, if not the most significant, market of cryptocurrency for the foreseeable future.

Conclusion

Does the Barclay report mention online gambling at all? No, and it’s a very good, comprehensive report. But it missed something “big”.

I see many reports on cryptocurrency that echo many of the same sentiments as Barclay (governments are going to ban crypto, junk coins will cause a bust). There is even a running joke in the Bitcoin community: “Look Bitcoin is down because China has banned it… for the seventh time.”

There are so many theories and predictions about where cryptocurrency is going (down, mostly) that it seems a new report comes out every week. But actual reporting on what cryptocurrency is used for? That’s much harder to find. But when you find it (like the Bloomberg report which took a lot of digging), the long-term for cryptocurrency looks bullish.

And that’s why I am (still) a bull.

By Ross Pilot via The New Currency Frontier

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