Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Why bitcoin matters, not just blockchain

The digital currency bitcoin keeps hitting new record highs. It topped $6,100 per coin earlier this week. That gave it a $100 billion market cap. It’s up 450% in 2017 so far, and 50% in the past month. Clearly, speculative investors believe in bitcoin right now.

Big names in finance keep dismissing it anyway.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon called bitcoin a “fraud” and said it’s “worse than tulip bulbs.” Ray Dalio, founder of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, called it a “bubble” because, “You can’t spend it very easily” and “the amount of speculation that is going on and the lack of transactions.” Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal said bitcoin, “doesn’t make sense… I think this is Enron in the making.”

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, who has dismissed bitcoin as a a “fraud”
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, who has dismissed bitcoin as a a “fraud”

While it is in fashion to brush off bitcoin, some of the very same names have voiced enthusiasm around blockchain, the distributed ledger technology that underlies bitcoin and originated with bitcoin in 2009.

Dimon himself has publicly said he sees potential in blockchain tech, and his company just announced this month the launch of a blockchain-based pilot to “significantly reduce” the number of entities needed to verify global payments, which would cut down transaction settlement times.

In fact, blockchain fever has taken hold all over Wall Street. To name only a few: JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Citi, and Visa are all doing some form of pilot testing with blockchain. Startups like Chain, itBit, and Digital Asset, which build private blockchain solutions for enterprise, are some of the hottest and best-funded fintech companies around.

Even Walmart is now using blockchain to track food shipments.

The fallacy of “blockchain without bitcoin”

There’s a paradox inherent in raving about blockchain but disparaging bitcoin, since the two originated together.