Ray Dalio admits he 'might be missing something' about Bitcoin as it surges past $17K

In a Twitter thread posted on Tuesday, Dalio stated he believed that Bitcoin (BTC) was not an effective medium of exchange nor a store of value due to its volatility. He also asserted that governments could outlaw crypto assets if they became a threat to fiat currencies. However, he also admitted he “might be missing something” and invited others to chime in with their explanations.

“I can’t imagine central banks, big Institutional investors, businesses or multinational companies using [Bitcoin],” said Dalio. “If I’m wrong about these things I would love to be corrected.”

I might be missing something about Bitcoin so I’d love to be corrected. My problems with Bitcoin being an effective currency are simple... (1/5)

— Ray Dalio (@RayDalio) November 17, 2020

Dalio’s remarks came following a BTC price surge as the crypto asset rose past $17,500 in less than 24 hours. The bullish news led to many contributors in the space sharing their views with the billionaire.

“Let's put it this way… Bitcoin is money, everything else is credit,” said Mati Greenspan.

Meltem Demirors, the chief strategy officer at CoinShares, offered a more in-depth response on how she believed BTC could be effectively used for payments, but added it was “a savings technology at its core.” BlockFi CEO Zac Prince followed with a thread of his own, addressing each of Dalio’s points in turn. He cited institutional investors recently adopting Bitcoin, including Fidelity Digital Assets, Square, Paul Tudor Jones, Bill Miller and Stanley Druckenmiller, to name a few.

2/ @RayDalio, you are starting from a bad initial position of Bitcoin needing to be a currency to be valuable. Better to think of it as an asset subject to the laws of supply and demand like gold, art etc. There's a great analogy about this - "Bitcoin has a platypus problem" pic.twitter.com/lRQY0XU2kS

— Zac Prince (@BlockFiZac) November 17, 2020

Last Thursday, Dalio stated that he believed governments would be likely to ramp up their efforts to restrict cryptocurrencies if they saw material growth. His remarks came when BTC price was roughly $2,000 less than it is today — $15,700 compared with $17,732.

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