
In the wake of the 450% gain Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) has logged since late 2022, it’s not a stretch to suggest that plenty of investors are kicking themselves for not buying into (literally and figuratively) the cryptocurrency movement. Even without understanding what they’re worth or how they’re valued, clearly at least a few people are getting very, very rich off of digital currencies.
Just don’t beat yourself up too much if you’re one of the millions of people who missed out. You’re hearing about the big wins, but you’re not hearing about all the horror stories or the brewing risk.
The crypto idea and underlying technology clearly have their merits. Most monetary transactions are already digitized in one form or another. Crypto’s underlying blockchain — a cryptocurrency’s digital ledger that records and secures its own transfers — just sidesteps the need for a centralized clearinghouse to facilitate these purchases. Such ledgers could theoretically even eliminate fraudulent transactions using conventional currency.
However, crypto’s blockchain technology doesn’t actually eliminate fraud. If anything, the nature of crypto makes it easier to swindle an unsuspecting person: There’s no central clearing platform to vet and verify the legitimacy of both parties to a transaction. If nothing else, a bank or a credit card network can at least do that much.
And yes, plenty of people are being defrauded out of their crypto assets. As the Motley Fool’s own in-house research arm reports, through the first three quarters of last year, scammers stole $1 billion worth of cryptocurrency from U.S. residents who believed their assets were safe from digital theft. As it turns out, the design of the blockchain works so well that there’s no way to get a crypto holding back once it’s been taken out of a digital wallet. Often, the recipient used a fake identity and is therefore impossible to track down.
This certainly doesn’t bolster the argument that the world is better off by working around third-party payment intermediaries and central-bank-managed fiat currencies, even if most crypto owners are never scammed.
Perhaps the stronger argument against jumping on the cryptocurrency bandwagon, however, is its sheer unpredictability.
Sure, Bitcoin’s extreme volatility since the beginning of 2023 has worked almost exclusively in its favor. And it’s not the only one. Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) and XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) are also up big, along with a bunch of other digital currencies.