Access Denied! These Major Banks Halt Cryptocurrency Purchases With Credit Cards

Last year, cryptocurrencies were nothing short of unstoppable. After beginning the year with a combined market cap of just $17.7 billion, the aggregate value of all cryptocurrencies catapulted to $613 billion by year's end. This better than 3,300% gain would have taken the broad-based S&P 500 decades to deliver.

The cryptocurrency swoon has arrived

This year, however, virtual currencies have been a volatile roller coaster. After hitting an all-time high of $835 billion on Jan. 7, the cryptocurrency market cap tumbled to more than a two-month low on Feb. 6 to $279 billion. That's a roughly 67% drop in value in just a matter of weeks.

A physical gold bitcoin, up close.
A physical gold bitcoin, up close.

Image source: Getty Images.

There are a number of reasons why pessimists have come out of the woodwork to pile on digital currencies. Among them is a step-up in regulations surrounding bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. For example, South Korea recently announced that it would be stepping up transparency requirements for folks who want to add funds into cryptocurrency accounts. New regulations require that banks identify their customers if their accounts are going to be linked to cryptocurrency exchanges. This pushback on anonymity is viewed as a potential blow to the privacy-coin movement, and it strikes against one of the primary lures of cryptocurrencies, in general.

Another issue is likely the lack of progress on the blockchain technology front. Blockchain is the digital, distributed, and decentralized ledger that underlies virtual currencies and is responsible for recording all transactions without the need for a financial intermediary. It's believed that blockchain could revolutionize the banking system by dramatically shortening transaction settlement times (especially cross-border transactions), and by lowering transaction fees. Since there is no banking involvement as a third party, that's one fewer mouth to feed, so to speak. Unfortunately, blockchain is only being examined in demos and small-scale projects after nearly a decade. It's enterprise-level acceptance is taking much longer than expected.

Cryptocurrencies have also, arguably, lacked individuality. They are intricately tied at the hip to bitcoin, which is the world's most valuable cryptocurrency, and the one most likely to be accepted by merchants worldwide. This lack of individuality has crippled other virtual coins as regulation surrounding bitcoin has ramped up.

A worried man holding a credit card and looking at his laptop.
A worried man holding a credit card and looking at his laptop.

Image source: Getty Images.

This big banking announcement is a major disappointment for cryptocurrencies

But all of these issues might pale in comparison to the game-changing announcement made by three major banks this past week concerning cryptocurrencies.