yomofo (OP)
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April 13, 2014, 10:38:14 PM |
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http://www.reddit.com/r/BitcoinMarkets/comments/22wuw6/lets_discuss_the_opinion_institutional_money_will/cgrie6nOK folks here's the answer, from someone who spent 10 years in the institutional business on the buy side. It's called "custody". And it's what Bitcoin doesn't have. If you're an institution and you invest in a fund, you don't wire funds to the fund manager. Your funds are wired to a custody bank, that holds your assets (the cash and the stocks the fund manager is buying). The fund manager never handles the cash himself, and never takes possession of the stocks himself. Now apply that to Bitcoin world. A Bitcoin fund manager actually controls the keys himself, he's essentially holding the assets himself. Very very few institutions would (or even could) go for an arrangement like this. Sure Dan Morehead (Pantera) might convince his old friends and clients to do it, but the real money wouldn't (couldn't) touch it. Look at Second Market: they list their "custodian" as "Second Market Holdings".
Somebody will solve this but until they do the flow will be a tiny trickle. Listing the Second Market Fund OTC will be a help, and normal custody arrangements will apply. But if I was the SEC, I'd be looking very carefully at the ownership of assets issue. It's probably also why the Winkelvii have not succeeded in getting their fund past the SEC. Add multi-sig into the mix...and you've got a lawyer's cluster on a grand scale.
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Arghhh
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April 13, 2014, 10:51:34 PM |
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Great, another institutional naysayer stating why it won't work. I bet he still writes checks. This reminds me of the mental midgets in the early 90's declaring why the internet won't work. In other news, Benjamin Lawsky, superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services, says why the fuck not? http://upstart.bizjournals.com/entrepreneurs/hot-shots/2014/03/11/ben-lawsky-to-accept-bitcoin-application.html"The department also announced today that it intends to propose the regulatory framework under which these applications will be processed no later than the end of the second quarter of 2014."
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Ibian
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April 13, 2014, 11:02:22 PM |
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Legislation is easy once the political will is there. Long term non-issue.
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Look inside yourself, and you will see that you are the bubble.
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nostradamus
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April 13, 2014, 11:20:22 PM |
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Legislation is easy once the political will money is there. Long term non-issue.
FTFY
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nakaone
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April 13, 2014, 11:35:48 PM |
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I do not get his argument, read the stuff three time - maybe a language thing. Is he saying that it is a technical problem? A fund manager at a custody bank should not alone be in control of the private key? Multisig solves that doesn't it? Or is it a law problem?
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Cluster2k
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April 13, 2014, 11:37:08 PM |
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The problem is simple to solve. Just get someone trustworthy like MtGox to hold the assets.
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bitcoinsrus
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April 13, 2014, 11:39:25 PM |
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The problem is simple to solve. Just get someone trustworthy like MtGox to hold the assets.
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Bit_Happy
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A Great Time to Start Something!
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April 13, 2014, 11:40:55 PM |
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Old-school "experts" are often not qualified to comment on Bitcoin. Also, (some) Wall Street money is already coming in now.
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msc
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April 13, 2014, 11:43:25 PM |
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The problem is simple to solve. Just get someone trustworthy ... to hold the assets.
In all seriousness, yes. A bank only has to hire someone knowledgeable and trustworthy to help them set up facilities and procedures for safekeeping.
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leopard2
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April 14, 2014, 12:17:27 AM |
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exactly The OP is rubbish, the reason why a custody is used is because it is necessary; a funds manager cannot store wheelbarrows full of stocks, bonds or whatever personally in the case of BTC a simple bank vault will do for cold storage of private keys, and for the fiat a bank account restricting access to both is a formality that issue is a non-issue
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Truth is the new hatespeech.
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Bit_Happy
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A Great Time to Start Something!
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April 14, 2014, 12:25:58 AM |
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exactly The OP is rubbish, the reason why a custody is used is because it is necessary; a funds manager cannot store wheelbarrows full of stocks, bonds or whatever personally in the case of BTC a simple bank vault will do for cold storage of private keys, and for the fiat a bank account restricting access to both is a formality that issue is a non-issue We need more "problems" to be solved that easily.
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MNDan
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April 14, 2014, 03:47:58 AM |
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I think "mental midget" pretty much sums up the OP.
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freedomno1
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Learning the troll avoidance button :)
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April 14, 2014, 03:49:39 AM |
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So the old school investors are worried they need to take responsibility for someones money instead of spending it and losing it willy nilly I wonder if anyone else sees it that way
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Believing in Bitcoins and it's ability to change the world
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TERA
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April 14, 2014, 04:30:07 AM |
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I don't understand this fetish with getting "wall street into bitcoin" anyway. Everytime I see it brought it up, it's about 'setting something up so people can invest'. but 'investments' into bitcoin via buying some bitcoin derivative is not what we need and will not help bitcoin. What bitcoin needs is for every day people to have the ability to buy bitcoins (safely) and actually use them as a form of money on the internet, send them to other users, and use bitcoin's features. Bitcoin is supposed to be a form of money - not some kind of mutual fund investment scheme.
It's the same thing with people on this forum. Everyone is always talking about bitcoin like some kind of "investment". But I thought bitcoin was supposed to be the future of money and payments.
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Ibian
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April 14, 2014, 05:03:50 AM |
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I don't understand this fetish with getting "wall street into bitcoin" anyway. Everytime I see it brought it up, it's about 'setting something up so people can invest'. but 'investments' into bitcoin via buying some bitcoin derivative is not what we need and will not help bitcoin. What bitcoin needs is for every day people to have the ability to buy bitcoins (safely) and actually use them as a form of money on the internet, send them to other users, and use bitcoin's features. Bitcoin is supposed to be a form of money - not some kind of mutual fund investment scheme.
It's the same thing with people on this forum. Everyone is always talking about bitcoin like some kind of "investment". But I thought bitcoin was supposed to be the future of money and payments.
Bitcoin is what it is. It does what it does and can be used in the ways it can be used. Ideology really has no place except to the individual.
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Look inside yourself, and you will see that you are the bubble.
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Elwar
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Viva Ut Vivas
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April 14, 2014, 05:34:34 AM |
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Wall Street money comes with strings attached.
Let them keep their fiat investments.
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First seastead company actually selling sea homes: Ocean Builders https://ocean.builders Of course we accept bitcoin.
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chessnut
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April 14, 2014, 05:40:48 AM |
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Wall Street money comes with strings attached.
Let them keep their fiat investments.
..... and let them come last.
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TERA
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April 14, 2014, 06:13:00 AM |
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What a sad state of affairs we are in that we call actually using bitcoin as an electronic payment network and a currency "ideology" - as if these things are second hand to price speculation and pumping. It's as if bitcoin has been swallowed up by a commercial borg of greedy people who want to use it as an advertising slogan just to get as much 'investor' money in, perform speculation, and profit off of other speculators, without neccessarily doing what is actually good for bitcoin and increasing its adoption. All these investment derivatives are just a construct surrounding bitcoin that doesn't really have anything to do with Bitcoin itself.
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pdawg
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April 14, 2014, 06:15:18 AM |
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...wall street has already jumped in bed.
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Zule
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April 14, 2014, 07:52:54 AM |
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Old-school "experts" are often not qualified to comment on Bitcoin. Also, (some) Wall Street money is already coming in now. Do you mean now or NOW, like its CCMF time?
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