e-News: Americans Are Taking Out Mortgages to Buy Bitcoin
Americans Are Taking Out Mortgages to Buy Bitcoin
People
are taking out mortgages to buy bitcoin, says securities regulator Joseph Borg.
Coupled with accounts of credit cards and equity loans being used to obtain
bitcoin, it raises the possibility of risk-taking investors being left deeply
indebted or potentially even homeless.
Betting It All On Bitcoin
Most
people have heard of “that Reddit guy” who took out equity on his house to buy
bitcoin earlier this year. His daring investment, made when bitcoin was trading
at around $3,000 a coin, has paid off so far. But if Joseph Borg is correct,
such cases are no longer isolated, and the higher bitcoin climbs, the greater
the risk credit-takers face.
Speaking
on CNBC on Monday, the veteran securities regulator said:
“We’ve seen
mortgages being taken out to buy bitcoin…People do credit cards, equity lines.
This is not something a guy who’s making $100,000 a year, who’s got a mortgage
and two kids in college ought to be invested in”.
As
president of the North American Securities Administrators Association and
director of the Alabama Securities Commission, Borg has a wealth of experience
to call upon. Even the most ardent of bitcoin believers would concede that
families probably shouldn’t be betting everything they have on bitcoin.
Using Cheap Credit to Buy Expensive Bitcoin
Mortgages
and equity aren’t the only means by which people have been scrambling to free
up funds for bitcoin: major sites such as Coinbase accept credit card payments.
So long as bitcoin keeps rising, buyers can pay off their monthly credit card
debt with their profits. A major correction, however, would leave investors
indebted and liable to defaulting on their loans.
“You’re
on this mania curve. At some point in time there’s got to be a leveling off,”
said Borg on CNBC’s Power Lunch. Bitcoin has proven extremely resilient this
year, shaking off negative news such as a Chinese cryptocurrency exchange
crackdown without much fuss. It is not inconceivable, however, that a major
global event, such as legislation emanating from the U.S. or South Korea, could
send the price of bitcoin plummeting.
Newcomers
to bitcoin have yet to experience a bear market. While bitcoin’s volatility is
much gentler than it was in its earliest days, the cryptocurrency is still
prone to swings, and like any asset is perfectly capable of heading south.
Homeowners who mortgage their property and profit handsomely from bitcoin’s
rise will feel rightfully vindicated. Not everyone can be a winner however.
When bitcoin was first born, many of its
earliest adopters saw the peer-to-peer currency as a “bank killer”. It would be
ironic if the digital currency’s rise – and subsequent fall – was to take a
bite out of the banks due to a credit craze fueled by bitcoin.
Bitcoin is a decentralized digital currency
that enables near-instant, low-cost payments to anyone, anywhere in the world.
Bitcoin uses peer-to-peer technology to operate with no central authority:
transaction management and money issuance are carried out collectively by the
network. Read all about it at wiki.Bitcoin.com.
