Bitcoin Forum

Economy => Economics => Topic started by: Merkuroth on June 07, 2011, 12:35:13 PM



Title: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Merkuroth on June 07, 2011, 12:35:13 PM
I had a simple thought that bitcoin banks might be a good idea. Of course, I thought about it a bit and realized, what are banks primarily based on? If you said "Interest", please go do the human race a favor and sterilize yourself. Banks are primarily based on loans. Loans which would not work well with the Bitcoin system, as without centralization, there's no real way to insure that money is repayed, unless they based it on real-world currencies, defeating the point entirely. Banks could also possibly contribute to the hoarding problem. Is there any way bitcoin banks could work without damaging the economy as a whole?

Edit: Well, a couple of minutes after creating this thread, I see there's already one made. Please excuse my lack of foresight in not searching for an existing thread first and delete this one.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: benjamindees on June 07, 2011, 01:40:44 PM
You can edit the subject and lock the thread.  It will fall off the main page.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: NetTecture on June 07, 2011, 02:37:18 PM
I had a simple thought that bitcoin banks might be a good idea. Of course, I thought about it a bit and realized, what are banks primarily based on? If you said "Interest", please go do the human race a favor and sterilize yourself. Banks are primarily based on loans. Loans which would not work well with the Bitcoin system, as without centralization, there's no real way to insure that money is repayed, unless they based it on real-world currencies, defeating the point entirely. Banks could also possibly contribute to the hoarding problem. Is there any way bitcoin banks could work without damaging the economy as a whole?

Edit: Well, a couple of minutes after creating this thread, I see there's already one made. Please excuse my lack of foresight in not searching for an existing thread first and delete this one.

You really miss the point here.

First, Banks could make money poviding safe accounts that are not easily forgotten. A central service provider can put a lot of redundancy into a wallet file.

Second, you can totally make bitcoin loans that HAVE to be repaid.

Make a loan contract. Noone says a bitcoin bank has to operate anonymously on the internet. It can be local / country based and make the same contracts normal banks can, run through the same legal system. Courts will look funny, but have to oblige to law. Contract law.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: MarketNeutral on June 08, 2011, 02:38:15 PM
Banks loan money into existence. If you walk into a bank and get a loan for $30,000, that money wasn't sitting there before you arrived. It was only created when you borrowed it into existence that very moment. $30,000 out of thin air, just like that, thanks to your signature.

See where I'm going with this?

A bitcoin bank would have to be fundamentally different from a modern, fractional-reserve bank.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Grant on June 08, 2011, 02:55:31 PM
I had a simple thought that bitcoin banks might be a good idea. Of course, I thought about it a bit and realized, what are banks primarily based on? If you said "Interest", please go do the human race a favor and sterilize yourself. Banks are primarily based on loans. Loans which would not work well with the Bitcoin system, as without centralization, there's no real way to insure that money is repayed, unless they based it on real-world currencies, defeating the point entirely. Banks could also possibly contribute to the hoarding problem. Is there any way bitcoin banks could work without damaging the economy as a whole?

Edit: Well, a couple of minutes after creating this thread, I see there's already one made. Please excuse my lack of foresight in not searching for an existing thread first and delete this one.

There are several ways around it.

There exists a swedish bank that operates without interest, they do it by creating a point system for depositors, which serves exceptionally well as a community bank.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JAK_members_bank and http://jak.se/

The other way is to decentralize the risk, in combination with a rating system (similar to the one we use in BTC-OTC), for each loan someone repays successfully they earn points by the lender. The more points they accumulate the easier they can get a greater loan. Then to decentralize the risk, one could use "the Goldman Sachs trick", package several toprated loans together with shitty ones, and sell it to investors as topclass bonds, as well as sell short options on those loans at bitoptions.org and you have one helluva leveraged fractional-reserve bank.

Problem is that both of these systems can be abused by both the banks, and the debtors.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 13, 2015, 10:43:40 PM
An Approach to a Crowd Banking System with Bitcoin?

I think it is possible to use Bitcoin because it has become a native currency on the Internet. This approach will work with its own “universal currency” known as points; the idea is to exchange the latter to local currencies or to virtual tokens in a rapid and simple way. Also is an environment for
micro loans based on points where the benefits and risks are shared in a community through prorations based on the weight of the lender. This approach can be used for people who do not participate no have access to the financial institutions.

Crowbe project: www.crowbe.com

What do you think?


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Possum577 on February 16, 2015, 07:00:17 AM
Banks aren't based on loans, that's just how they make money/revenue. They could make their money in other ways and still "hold assets" for customers. Bitcoin banks already exist, check out Coinbase.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Amph on February 16, 2015, 08:12:56 AM
better to use an upcoming service like Bazar, which is decentralized and suit more the bitcoin formula


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Borisz on February 16, 2015, 11:02:03 AM
Since you cannot inflate bitcoin like fiat, assume there is a central bank.

Assume they give interest on holdings and do loans as well with interest rates of 1% and 5%, respectively.

Since they make more money than they give to customers, this would imply that they are continuously gaining more and more coins. Since coins cannot be diluted with inflation, wouldn't this mean that after X time all the coins would belong to the bank?

Of course the whole situation depends on the amount of loans vs interest accounts. Maybe the interest rate could be adjusted so that the above situation never happens. But I think this would be dangerous.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 16, 2015, 12:55:36 PM
A Bitcoin bank, in the traditional sense of the word, would have to offer notes backed by bitcoin. This would not affect the underlying money supply or its rate of creation. These bitcoin-notes could theoretically exceed in quantity (and value too perhaps) of bitcoins themselves. Furthermore these notes would be credit-debt instruments so that when debts are repaid, these notes are essentially destroyed. In the meantime, notes would circulate like currency and debtors could assign their notes to anybody else who may accept them.
Bitcoin notes would be money.
Bitcoin still is not money.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 16, 2015, 01:24:25 PM
Banks aren't based on loans, that's just how they make money/revenue.

Banks ARE based on loans. That is all they do.

Wallet services like Coinbase who simply hold on to funds and make money doing a number of other things including transaction services are NOT banks.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: thejaytiesto on February 16, 2015, 02:23:56 PM
Well aint the main point of Bitcoin being your own bank? sort of defeats the purpose.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: bitbunnny on February 16, 2015, 03:13:10 PM
If there'll be a BTC bank, then BTC looses the original sense and whole idea of crypto currency


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Borisz on February 16, 2015, 03:27:30 PM
A Bitcoin bank, in the traditional sense of the word, would have to offer notes backed by bitcoin. This would not affect the underlying money supply or its rate of creation. These bitcoin-notes could theoretically exceed in quantity (and value too perhaps) of bitcoins themselves. Furthermore these notes would be credit-debt instruments so that when debts are repaid, these notes are essentially destroyed. In the meantime, notes would circulate like currency and debtors could assign their notes to anybody else who may accept them.
Bitcoin notes would be money.
Bitcoin still is not money.

Ok, I thought you meant banks only as a central body for holding funds and interest/loan service.
Issuing notes is a whole new thing. So basically think of Bitcoins as a new type of gold reserves? I'm not sure how many countries would agree to a new currency backed in such a way.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: manselr on February 16, 2015, 03:46:33 PM
Why the hell would you trust a Bitcoin bank if all the exchanges always end up fucked? whats the difference?

Just own your own BTC; have some responsibility for fuck sakes.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 16, 2015, 03:55:17 PM
A Bitcoin bank, in the traditional sense of the word, would have to offer notes backed by bitcoin. This would not affect the underlying money supply or its rate of creation. These bitcoin-notes could theoretically exceed in quantity (and value too perhaps) of bitcoins themselves. Furthermore these notes would be credit-debt instruments so that when debts are repaid, these notes are essentially destroyed. In the meantime, notes would circulate like currency and debtors could assign their notes to anybody else who may accept them.
Bitcoin notes would be money.
Bitcoin still is not money.

Ok, I thought you meant banks only as a central body for holding funds and interest/loan service.
Issuing notes is a whole new thing. So basically think of Bitcoins as a new type of gold reserves? I'm not sure how many countries would agree to a new currency backed in such a way.

One version of financial history has it that paper money notes originated when goldsmiths holding reserves of gold (think:wallet service) for people recognized that at any given point only x% of those people were coming  up to collect their gold. This meant that they only needed to keep a fraction of gold on hand and could loan or invest the rest of it. The receipts that people leaving gold with goldsmiths held became notes backed by gold and the quantity of gold represented by notes began to exceed the actual physical gold, but this was never a problem as there was always enough debtors in the system to make the notes valuable.

Most banks have been commercial banks: issuing loans to finance investment - in modern terms this is to start a company, expand a company, buy property or finance the acquisition of another company (investment banks specialize in the last one).
A savings bank is a relatively new thing popularized in the U.S. after the Great Depression and due in part to the establishment of the FDIC to guarantee bank deposits up to a certain amount. But savings banks do not sit on cash. Like the goldsmiths of old, they turn around and loan or invest the majority of those funds (up to 90% of them as regulation stands in the U.S. today). No savings bank could survive if it didn't make loans, and that is also why savings deposits accrue interest: not because banks are generous but because you have made a loan to the savings bank by agreeing to deposit funds in your account held there.

Also banks have been around a lot longer historically than central banks. The first central bank was the Bank of Amsterdam which started out as a private commercial bank in 1609 but turned into a de facto central bank in the 18th century after the Netherlands became an international trading hub and gold began flooding in. The Bank of Amsterdam would take merchants' gold, and for a small fee (seigniorage) mint coins that were backed by the full faith and redeemable at the Bank. These 'official' coins became more valuable than the value of the gold contained in them.

The Bank of England is the second central bank, which also started out as a private commercial bank in 1690. It began loaning money to the crown to fund various war efforts and the British empire began racking up a national debt. In 1781 the Bank of England was nationalized and began managing the gold supply and national debt by decree.

There were many banks and banking companies that did not control the money supply, interest rates or target inflation going back to ancient times. The de Medici family ran private banks, financing much of the Renaissance and Enlightenment growth. The Templars undertook commercial banking after the crusades and before that monasteries served as loan facility to the local population.

  


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: oblivi on February 16, 2015, 04:05:30 PM
Why the hell would you trust a Bitcoin bank if all the exchanges always end up fucked? whats the difference?

Just own your own BTC; have some responsibility for fuck sakes.

I trust the Winklevii brothers and their Gemini exchange, seems solid as hell.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Borisz on February 16, 2015, 04:41:49 PM
A Bitcoin bank, in the traditional sense of the word, would have to offer notes backed by bitcoin. This would not affect the underlying money supply or its rate of creation. These bitcoin-notes could theoretically exceed in quantity (and value too perhaps) of bitcoins themselves. Furthermore these notes would be credit-debt instruments so that when debts are repaid, these notes are essentially destroyed. In the meantime, notes would circulate like currency and debtors could assign their notes to anybody else who may accept them.
Bitcoin notes would be money.
Bitcoin still is not money.

Ok, I thought you meant banks only as a central body for holding funds and interest/loan service.
Issuing notes is a whole new thing. So basically think of Bitcoins as a new type of gold reserves? I'm not sure how many countries would agree to a new currency backed in such a way.

One version of financial history has it that paper money notes originated when goldsmiths holding reserves of gold (think:wallet service) for people recognized that at any given point only x% of those people were coming  up to collect their gold. This meant that they only needed to keep a fraction of gold on hand and could loan or invest the rest of it. The receipts that people leaving gold with goldsmiths held became notes backed by gold and the quantity of gold represented by notes began to exceed the actual physical gold, but this was never a problem as there was always enough debtors in the system to make the notes valuable.

Most banks have been commercial banks: issuing loans to finance investment - in modern terms this is to start a company, expand a company, buy property or finance the acquisition of another company (investment banks specialize in the last one).
A savings bank is a relatively new thing popularized in the U.S. after the Great Depression and due in part to the establishment of the FDIC to guarantee bank deposits up to a certain amount. But savings banks do not sit on cash. Like the goldsmiths of old, they turn around and loan or invest the majority of those funds (up to 90% of them as regulation stands in the U.S. today). No savings bank could survive if it didn't make loans, and that is also why savings deposits accrue interest: not because banks are generous but because you have made a loan to the savings bank by agreeing to deposit funds in your account held there.

Also banks have been around a lot longer historically than central banks. The first central bank was the Bank of Amsterdam which started out as a private commercial bank in 1609 but turned into a de facto central bank in the 18th century after the Netherlands became an international trading hub and gold began flooding in. The Bank of Amsterdam would take merchants' gold, and for a small fee (seigniorage) mint coins that were backed by the full faith and redeemable at the Bank. These 'official' coins became more valuable than the value of the gold contained in them.

The Bank of England is the second central bank, which also started out as a private commercial bank in 1690. It began loaning money to the crown to fund various war efforts and the British empire began racking up a national debt. In 1781 the Bank of England was nationalized and began managing the gold supply and national debt by decree.

There were many banks and banking companies that did not control the money supply, interest rates or target inflation going back to ancient times. The de Medici family ran private banks, financing much of the Renaissance and Enlightenment growth. The Templars undertook commercial banking after the crusades and before that monasteries served as loan facility to the local population.

Nice read, thanks!

The problem I still see is who would approve and overwatch this? Also, would users be happy with such a centralization? This would turn bitcoin into "cash", well the issued notes, but I guess you get what I mean.

Also, could I also issue notes based on the coins I hold? Or how would the bitcoin & Bitnote (quick invention  ::) ) coexist? Would it be the same to hold 1 BTC or the equivalent Bitnote? If the bank deflates the notes like banks did it with the gold backing, that could lead to value problems.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 16, 2015, 05:04:24 PM
Quote
Also, could I also issue notes based on the coins I hold? Or how would the bitcoin & Bitnote (quick invention  ::) ) coexist? Would it be the same to hold 1 BTC or the equivalent Bitnote? If the bank deflates the notes like banks did it with the gold backing, that could lead to value problems.

When the gold standard existed, dollars (and British pounds, French francs etc.) all existed alongside gold.

As for 'deflating', it all depends if you agree that money formation is endogenous or exogenous. Mainstream economics and monetarists assert that money is exogeneous - the supply is set and changed by central banks. In this scenario, deposits create loans: you put money in the bank they lend it out up to the limit they are allowed to and obtain reserves from the central bank. Central bank money is 'multiplied' through fractional reserve banking.

Keynesian, Post-Keynesian, Real-Business-Cycle and Marxian economists endorse endogenous money. Here, loans create deposits instead: a business seeks a loan to undertake a new project to expand their profits. They go to a bank who issues the loan de novo - they basically create the money out of thin air. But that's fine- the company uses the loan money to pay their employees and their suppliers for this new project. The suppliers then pay their employees etc. This money in the form of wages and payments finds its way back to the bank (here our bank can represent the entire banking system) in the form of deposits. If the reserves at the end of the day are not sufficient to support the loan demand, the bank will query the central bank who will only then print the money needed to supply the reserves.

This is a VERY nutshell version and the debate rages among economists as to which is the true description. But what is clear, is that it does not matter if the money is fiat or backed by a gold standard or whatever. The influence on the money (the notes, not the physical bullion in the case of the gold standard -- the gold is not money, the notes are) will be the same anyway.

For bitcoin, if bitnotes become a thing who can be the 'banks'? Miners can, to the degree that they obtain a steady flow of new money each day from 'the system'. But miners are competing with each other to such an extent that they lose profitability over time, so that might not work as well as it might seem at first. Those who have obtained a large supply of BTC through the open market or by conducting business in them could potentially create banknotes against their reserves, but if they are not actively obtaining more each day then they will go bust as soon as demand for notes exceeds their supply enough that a 'run' on the 'bank' would be ruinous. What about wallet services like coinbase or blockchain.info? They could create notes if they could issue loans denominated in BTC but that is not their business- they are payment and merchant services company. They are not interested in using Bitnotes as currency - they want bitcoin itself to be the good stuff. They could pay Bitcoin dividends to account holders from profits generated in their merchant services business but that would make account holders equity shareholders. This makes bitcoin an asset and not a money.

Bitnotes could earn interest as a debtor-creditor obligation and serve as money. But there is a problem in who can issue them without going bust given one or two bad loans.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 17, 2015, 05:37:47 PM
Bitcoin is gradually maturing and being accepted, the concept of cryptocurrency still remains abstract, however the trend is to create new types of banks with the bitcoin's protocol. Crowbe is one approach.
http://www.crowbe.com/

In the approach the lender has his reward: "The reward is the "return of investment", instead of using some percentage gain,
we define the profit as the extra ammount of points after applying the prorates"
.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: pereira4 on February 17, 2015, 06:56:06 PM
There's is a place for banks in teh bitcoin world, not everyone wants to have the responsability of securing their own entire wealth.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: BillyBobZorton on February 19, 2015, 07:49:00 PM
I would trust a bank only if it has the highest most solid regulation and whoever fucks up will get punished.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Amph on February 19, 2015, 08:13:25 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 19, 2015, 11:21:53 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do

a wallet is a bank the same way a piggy bank is a bank. What you are referring to is a vault perhaps.
A bank (as a business) is not a place to store cash, it is a place that issues loans and takes deposits. When you deposit money in the bank they don't actually have your money - instead your deposit is a claim to demand that amount of money. It shows up on the bank's balance sheet as a liability.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: manselr on February 20, 2015, 04:16:53 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do
Some people just will never get their heads around having to be fully responsable of your own wealth storage, they will demand banks to feel safer.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: oblivi on February 20, 2015, 07:47:32 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do
Some people just will never get their heads around having to be fully responsable of your own wealth storage, they will demand banks to feel safer.
Exactly. Most people have that mentality and nothing is going to change that I am afraid.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: ajareselde on February 20, 2015, 10:13:35 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do

But the point being made was the bitcoin credit giver aka bitcoin bank, and i doubt there are no takers here. What would the differece be from existing banks would be is the real question,
since bitcoin, like any fiat fluctuates in value, and there would probably be some loosers in that game.
"Be you own bank" is just for your own funds, but getting loans is a different thing entirely.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 21, 2015, 01:03:34 AM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do

a wallet is a bank the same way a piggy bank is a bank. What you are referring to is a vault perhaps.
A bank (as a business) is not a place to store cash, it is a place that issues loans and takes deposits. When you deposit money in the bank they don't actually have your money - instead your deposit is a claim to demand that amount of money. It shows up on the bank's balance sheet as a liability.

Because banks issues loans and deposits, I think new approaches could be developed with the Bitcoin's protocol. There are more than two billion of adults on the planet today without access to banks, credit cards, or to the mainstream financial system. Having a Bitcoin-based bank could be one solution.

I recommend to read this: http://www.quora.com/How-does-bitcoin-and-the-information-technology-that-makes-it-possible-have-implications-on-our-world-as-a-global-society


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: BillyBobZorton on February 22, 2015, 05:27:01 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do
Some people just will never get their heads around having to be fully responsable of your own wealth storage, they will demand banks to feel safer.
Exactly. Most people have that mentality and nothing is going to change that I am afraid.
This. The main critique of bitcoin like the day on the CNN documentary is the never ending hacks in the exchanges.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: indiemax on February 22, 2015, 08:41:49 PM
Why the hell would you trust a Bitcoin bank if all the exchanges always end up fucked? whats the difference?

Just own your own BTC; have some responsibility for fuck sakes.

I trust the Winklevii brothers and their Gemini exchange, seems solid as hell.

until it goes wrong  ;D


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: BillyBobZorton on February 23, 2015, 01:59:50 PM
Why the hell would you trust a Bitcoin bank if all the exchanges always end up fucked? whats the difference?

Just own your own BTC; have some responsibility for fuck sakes.

I trust the Winklevii brothers and their Gemini exchange, seems solid as hell.

until it goes wrong  ;D

Well it's supposed to have all regulations needed to be considered a solid bank.
If Gemini fails too Bitcoin couldn't survive that hit.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 23, 2015, 11:29:23 PM
Why the hell would you trust a Bitcoin bank if all the exchanges always end up fucked? whats the difference?

Just own your own BTC; have some responsibility for fuck sakes.

I trust the Winklevii brothers and their Gemini exchange, seems solid as hell.

until it goes wrong  ;D

Well it's supposed to have all regulations needed to be considered a solid bank.
If Gemini fails too Bitcoin couldn't survive that hit.

How could you regulate a Bitcoin-based bank, don't you think that is like regulate the internet?
One of the challenges is to have bitcoin "exchange houses" to local currencies in poor countries. Considering that digital wallets are accessible from cellphones and these are already quite widespread.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 24, 2015, 02:24:19 AM
There might be a way that PoS coins could operate as a distributed credit system making it akin to banking.
Right now staking wallets hoard money in order increase their chances of winning the 'raffle' that mints new PoS coins and adds them to the blockchain.
This is fundamentally flawed for a currency system since hoarding money causes a deflationary spiral and a liquidity crisis. It also moves the cryptocurrency ecosystem into a phase of rentier capitalism that will only benefit few and remove the 'spirit' of the experiment.

What if, though, the funds inside staking wallets are made available for loan. The wallet holder will still have the rights to the 'raffle tickets' but the coins in question could be borrowed by whomever. The borrower would be 'short' the raffle tickets to the lender. Those rights to the tickets could be transferable and assignable becoming the seeds for crypto banknotes.

This is just a seed  of an idea and I am sure there are flaws and also positives that I have not yet figured out.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 24, 2015, 02:45:04 AM
^^ And I am not talking about what BitShares is trying to do with creating BitAssets pegged to Fiat and paid interest because of leverage required by speculators. I am talking about a lending facility for real economic production and not (necessarily) speculation on the price of the underlying.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 24, 2015, 06:10:54 PM
There might be a way that PoS coins could operate as a distributed credit system making it akin to banking.
Right now staking wallets hoard money in order increase their chances of winning the 'raffle' that mints new PoS coins and adds them to the blockchain.
This is fundamentally flawed for a currency system since hoarding money causes a deflationary spiral and a liquidity crisis. It also moves the cryptocurrency ecosystem into a phase of rentier capitalism that will only benefit few and remove the 'spirit' of the experiment.

What if, though, the funds inside staking wallets are made available for loan. The wallet holder will still have the rights to the 'raffle tickets' but the coins in question could be borrowed by whomever. The borrower would be 'short' the raffle tickets to the lender. Those rights to the tickets could be transferable and assignable becoming the seeds for crypto banknotes.

This is just a seed  of an idea and I am sure there are flaws and also positives that I have not yet figured out.

What do you think of this bitcoin-based approach to loans? www.crowbe.com


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: hazenyc on February 24, 2015, 06:36:47 PM
There might be a way that PoS coins could operate as a distributed credit system making it akin to banking.
Right now staking wallets hoard money in order increase their chances of winning the 'raffle' that mints new PoS coins and adds them to the blockchain.
This is fundamentally flawed for a currency system since hoarding money causes a deflationary spiral and a liquidity crisis. It also moves the cryptocurrency ecosystem into a phase of rentier capitalism that will only benefit few and remove the 'spirit' of the experiment.

What if, though, the funds inside staking wallets are made available for loan. The wallet holder will still have the rights to the 'raffle tickets' but the coins in question could be borrowed by whomever. The borrower would be 'short' the raffle tickets to the lender. Those rights to the tickets could be transferable and assignable becoming the seeds for crypto banknotes.

This is just a seed  of an idea and I am sure there are flaws and also positives that I have not yet figured out.

What do you think of this bitcoin-based approach to loans? www.crowbe.com

This doesn't really say much except that it's a microloan facility which already exists from a number of sites. Microloans are person to person or peer-to-peer loans which are not assignable so it's not that useful. Meaning if I loan you 1 BTC to start a cookie business you can't assign that debt to somebody else so that now my debt is to them and not you. Debts should be fungible and transferable/assignable. Microloans carry a high degree of credit risk as well.

I see the bitcoin blockchain as being able to verify dollar loans via colored coins but that's also not the same thing.



Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: tee-rex on February 24, 2015, 08:42:24 PM
bitcoin has already a banks, and this is your wallet, your personal bank, which is the best and most secure bank, if you know what you do

a wallet is a bank the same way a piggy bank is a bank. What you are referring to is a vault perhaps.
A bank (as a business) is not a place to store cash, it is a place that issues loans and takes deposits. When you deposit money in the bank they don't actually have your money - instead your deposit is a claim to demand that amount of money. It shows up on the bank's balance sheet as a liability.

Though I agree with you on the whole, but what about savings banks then, which primary purpose is accepting savings deposits, not issuing loans?


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 24, 2015, 08:44:41 PM
There might be a way that PoS coins could operate as a distributed credit system making it akin to banking.
Right now staking wallets hoard money in order increase their chances of winning the 'raffle' that mints new PoS coins and adds them to the blockchain.
This is fundamentally flawed for a currency system since hoarding money causes a deflationary spiral and a liquidity crisis. It also moves the cryptocurrency ecosystem into a phase of rentier capitalism that will only benefit few and remove the 'spirit' of the experiment.

What if, though, the funds inside staking wallets are made available for loan. The wallet holder will still have the rights to the 'raffle tickets' but the coins in question could be borrowed by whomever. The borrower would be 'short' the raffle tickets to the lender. Those rights to the tickets could be transferable and assignable becoming the seeds for crypto banknotes.

This is just a seed  of an idea and I am sure there are flaws and also positives that I have not yet figured out.

What do you think of this bitcoin-based approach to loans? www.crowbe.com

This doesn't really say much except that it's a microloan facility which already exists from a number of sites. Microloans are person to person or peer-to-peer loans which are not assignable so it's not that useful. Meaning if I loan you 1 BTC to start a cookie business you can't assign that debt to somebody else so that now my debt is to them and not you. Debts should be fungible and transferable/assignable. Microloans carry a high degree of credit risk as well.

I see the bitcoin blockchain as being able to verify dollar loans via colored coins but that's also not the same thing.



The difference is that those micro loans are not made out of "thin air" (benefits and risks are shared in a community
through prorations based on the weight of the lender), and also is an invest because after some prorates you will eventully have back your BTC plus a profit. The idea is to carry loans to poor areas. The impact of one BTC in a poor currency could be huge.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: Razick on February 25, 2015, 10:01:10 PM
This is a common fallacy in the Bitcoin community. The fact is banks could work almost the same with Bitcoin as with the US dollar. Yes, that includes creating more Bitcoin from nothing. Keep in mind: Banks don't actually print more dollar bills, but they do put new "dollars" in circulation. Likewise, Bitcoin banks wouldn't mine Bitcoin into existence, but they would create new "bitcoins." There is nothing to prevent fractional reserve banking.

Also, remember that banks work with cash. There is no built in mechanism to force a borrower to repay a cash loan, but there is a legal structure, which works just as well with Bitcoin.


Title: Re: Bitcoin banks
Post by: drotares on February 26, 2015, 12:49:29 AM
This is a common fallacy in the Bitcoin community. The fact is banks could work almost the same with Bitcoin as with the US dollar. Yes, that includes creating more Bitcoin from nothing. Keep in mind: Banks don't actually print more dollar bills, but they do put new "dollars" in circulation. Likewise, Bitcoin banks wouldn't mine Bitcoin into existence, but they would create new "bitcoins." There is nothing to prevent fractional reserve banking.

Also, remember that banks work with cash. There is no built in mechanism to force a borrower to repay a cash loan, but there is a legal structure, which works just as well with Bitcoin.

What do you think about the weaknesses of fractional reserve lending? (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HYSMxu-Dns)

I think these comments are interesting: http://www.quora.com/How-does-bitcoin-and-the-information-technology-that-makes-it-possible-have-implications-for-our-world-as-a-global-society