Hello folks,
I recently found about this (new?) cryptocurrency and would like to hear your thoughts about it. It is called
Goldbits. The idea is to have a cryptocurrency pegged to gold. The way I understand it, it works like this:
1) The currency is a fork of Litecoin. This has been chosen to make the computations easier and faster (as opposed to Bitcoin, for instance) and to make use of the already existing open source software (e.g., wallet).
2) The currency is 100% pre-mined - all the 30 billion coins of it. Only 2000 coins are released to the market by the developers, because they are backed by 2 kg gold held in the vault of the developers. It their gold reserves increase in the future, a corresponding amount of coins will be released; the idea is to have one coin backed by 1 gram of gold.
3) The gold reserves are audited every month and there is a semi-live web camera feed monitoring the gold in the vault (all the 2 bars of it that are there now).
4) The currency is not redeemable for gold from the reserves. The reasons stated are practical (you can't shave 1-gram slices from a certified investment-grade gold bar and mail them around), but even if you have 1000 coins, you won't be allowed to exchange them for 1 bar.
What are your thoughts on this? I can see the following problems:
1) It is not a true P2P currency. The ledger is public and distributed but the developers hold practically all the coins (which have been pre-mined) and practically act as a "world central bank" for the currency. To begin with, this flies in the face of Satoshi's original idea of "free, distributed, peer-to-peer currency". The libertarian in me shivers at the thought of one entity controlling the whole currency.
2) How can we trust that the gold is really there? None of us is likely to fly to Iceland and consult the auditing company. And digital feeds are easily faked - how do we know that we aren't shown one constant loop and the gold is long gone?
3) Even if the gold is still there and the company can be trusted now, what guarantee do we have that it can be trusted in the future? Suppose that the next year they say "oops, we have decided that from now on 1 coin will be backed only by 0.5 grams of gold". This will effectively devalue the holdings of everyone and there is nothing they can do about it.
4) Since the currency is not redeemable for gold, no arbitrage is possible. At the time of this writing, the gold price is about $38 per gram. Suppose that as the cryptocurrency trades on the exchanges, its price is set to $30 per coin. Obviously, a distortion has occurred and the 1 goldbit/goldgram ratio has been broken. In a free market, arbitrageurs would buy the coins, exchange them for gold, sell the gold and make a profit - and with this action will push the price of the coin up and the price of gold down, restoring the intended ratio automatically. But since the currency is irredeemable, this is not possible. (Exactly the same problem can occur in the opposite direction - if the coin becomes more expensive than a gram of gold.)
Anything else I might have missed? Or am I wrong about any of the above? Because, for now, from my point of view this is a currency made by a company I don't know and can't trust, a company with full control of the currency in circulation, and a currency that has an embedded economic problem.