Latest blog posts on Weiss Cryptocurrency Ratings

Have you or a family member invested in cryptocurrencies? If not, why?

 

To comment, click here. Otherwise, read on …

After it first began trading ten years ago, Bitcoin plunged by at least 70% on four separate occasions.

Each time, Wall Street “experts” wrote Bitcoin’s obituary. But each time, it came back from the dead and surged to new all-time highs.

If you had bought the “dead” Bitcoin after each of its first four big declines, you could have made average profits of 6,300% or 63 to one.

And now Bitcoin has declined 70% again! Even if it rises only half as much as in the past, you could be looking at 31-to-one profits.

But guess what! Bitcoin is no longer the most advanced cryptocurrency. This time around, you have even better choices.

The question I have for you today is:

If you buy one of our highest rated cryptocurrencies today, how much would you expect to make? And what are the risks?

Click here to tell us what you think.

Then be sure to mark your calendar for Tuesday, November 13 at 2 PM Eastern Time.

That’s when we will respond to your comments and talk about when the next major surge is likely to begin.

 

Best wishes,

Martin D. Weiss, Founder of Weiss Ratings
Juan M. Villaverde, Weiss Cryptocurrency Ratings

What do YOU think the price of Bitcoin will be at the end of the year?

If you’re right (or just close), you can win $5,000 worth of Bitcoin.

To comment, click here. Otherwise, read on …

The architect of our cryptocurrency ratings model, Juan Villaverde, has made a discovery that I find fascinating.

The same cycles that accurately predicted the tops and bottoms in stocks, bonds and commodities are now predicting a major move in Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies.

These cycles allow him to forecast the movements in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies with greater accuracy than any other forecasting model we know of.

We will reveal his prediction during our special briefing, Weiss Ratings’ Crypto Forecast, this coming Wednesday, March 21 at 2:00 PM Eastern Time.

But in the meantime, I’m wondering: What do YOU predict Bitcoin will be on December 31, 2018?

Do you agree with the pundits who say Bitcoin could reach $50,000 by that point?

Or are you in the camp that Bitcoin will return to its so-called “true value” of $0?

Or somewhere in between?

Give me your answer below. Don’t worry, there’s no money on the line — yet.

You will give the answer that could make you $5,000 richer later.

You see, I’m offering a $5,000 worth of Bitcoin prize to the reader who most accurately predicts what the price of Bitcoin will be on December 31, 2018.

Since you registered to attend Weiss Ratings’ Crypto Forecast, you’re eligible to enter for free.

That’s an important point: I don’t want you make your entry in this lucrative contest without all of the facts. Before you make your pick, you need to hear our forecast.

You may submit your entry (and only one) after our briefing on Wednesday, March 21st.

But until then, what do you think Bitcoin will be on December 31, 2018?

Why These Crypto Critics Are Dead Wrong

To comment, click here. Otherwise, read on …

Never in my lifetime have I seen such passion on a blog!

All thanks to the fabulous profits — and dramatic intermediate declines — in a single, unique, new kind of investment vehicle, cryptocurrencies!

Some crypto critics, especially government officials, would have you believe that cryptocurrencies “have no intrinsic value and should go to zero.”

Bah! We’re so darn tired of hearing this argument we decided to refute it once and for all — right here and now.

First, for so-called economic experts who profess such theories, it’s time to go back to Economics 101. What defines most of the value in most forms of money — whether cowry shells, paper greenbacks or digital currency — is not its so-called “intrinsic value.”

Heck, if that were the case, a hundred-dollar bill would be worth less than a cent and a $10-million bank account would be worth only the half-second it takes to delete it.

Unless you’re talking about precious metal coins, any official discussion of so-called intrinsic value is nothing more than a smelly smokescreen. Anyone making that argument should know darn well that what truly gives value to modern-day money is acceptance and usage.

Let me spell that out …

A currency will have value if it is accepted and used by a large community of individuals, businesses, financial institutions, governments and others.

Is that everything? No. In addition, a currency should have some sort of foundational application that gets the ball rolling — a starting point from which an entire economy can be built. We call that a “value anchor.”

Consider fiat money like the British pound or the U.S. dollar, for example.

Care to guess what the foundational application is? Historically it’s been the fact that you have to use the currency to pay the tax man.

That’s right. It’s generally agreed that the original value anchor for a government’s fiat money is the payment of government taxes.

It makes sense: Almost all adult citizens of a nation are required to pay taxes in some form. Further, the volume of tax revenues is more or less correlated to the pace of economic activity.

So indirectly, the value of a currency is anchored to the economic activity of the people who use it.

Isn’t this why economists say a national currency is backed by the productive capacity of the nation? Isn’t this why foreign exchange traders like to buy U.S. dollars when the U.S. economy is growing … or Australian dollars when commodities are booming?

What About Crypto?

Crypto detractors would have you believe that, unlike fiat money, no one is required to use cryptocurrencies.

Here’s what they’re missing …

First, although crypto is still younger and more volatile than the dollar or the pound, it’s already far more advanced in terms of anonymity, ownership and decentralization.

For the first time in modern history, individuals can truly own and fully control their own wealth without relying on — or being beholden to — any central authority.

Second, if you want to understand the real value of crypto, you have to look beyond just payment processing. You need to understand …

Why Cryptocurrencies are
MUCH MORE Than “Currency”

Most people have gotten into the habit of using the word “currency” for all cryptos. But what the critics seem oblivious to is the fact that crypto is really much more than that.

In fact, for most second- and third-generation cryptocurrency technologies, the term “currency” doesn’t really apply anymore. They are really crypto-platforms that are creating virtual economies and, potentially, even virtual nations.

Take Ethereum, for example, a platform capable of supporting a whole series of different functions.

You can use Ethereum to raise money with Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs). And unlike IPOs, which are restricted primarily to enterprises in advanced nations with relatively big budgets, ICOs are used by projects of any size anywhere in the world.

In fact, Ethereum is the basis for an entire economic system, called a “token economy.” And unlike the traditional economy, it is borderless, permissionless, decentralized.

Let’s say a gold mine decides to issue tokens that can be redeemed for gold. And let’s say these tokens are created and exchanged with Ether. In other words, they are built on the Ethereum platform.

What does that mean? Well, it means that the Ether token is backed by gold (at least partially and indirectly).

And let’s say thousands of similar projects start running on top of the same crypto-platform. It could be commodities, services, companies, governments, you name it.

In fact, if properly designed, a crypto-platform is capable of running virtually anything.

ICON for instance is being used by financial services companies, universities, even hospitals. All based on the same technology. All with their ICX token, used as the glue that ties everyone and everything together.

Why? Because ICX is THE standard in the ICON economy.

No, not everyone in any particular country on the planet is required to use ICX. But remember, cryptocurrencies are borderless. What matters is that everyone who wants to live and operate inside the ICON economy WILL likely be required to use ICX in some shape or form.

Ditto for cryptocurrencies like NEO, Ark, EOS, Cardano and many others. Each has its own laws and regulations, its own service providers, its own community, its own citizens. Thus …

It’s about time that the critics wake up to what’s really happening in the crypto world: Instead of thinking about these platforms as mere payment networks, they must be viewed as virtual nations with ties to the real economic world that anchor their value.

Suppose thousands of businesses join this virtual nation. Suppose it grows to such size and scale that you can use its tokens to acquire virtually everything you may need for your everyday life.

  • To buy shares in private companies listed exclusively on its exchange.
  • To book a hotel room or buy a condo.
  • To buy groceries directly from producers with no intermediaries.
  • Even to buy gold.

Now, could the critics still say that the cryptocurrency has no backing, no intrinsic value, no anchor to the real world?

Sound far-fetched? Actually, all the examples above are real projects being deployed today on the Ethereum blockchain.

And real people are being drawn to these kinds of crypto-economies in droves.

Because they see a level playing field, a platform that’s free from the bureaucracy and geographic limitations of nation-states.

All with no language, cultural, political or geographic restrictions! All neutral, borderless, decentralized, permissionless and censorship-resistant.

So if anyone tries to tell you that “crypto is going to zero,” just hang up the phone or show them to the door.

Then always remember: Cryptocurrency is not just currency. It’s also a platform for a virtual economy that’s directly linked to the real world.

And that’s the true meaning of real value.

Now we want to hear what you think. Do you believe cryptocurrencies have an intrinsic value? If so, what’s your reasoning?

Or are you firmly entrenched in the “Monopoly money” camp?

Let me know your thoughts in the comment section below. Then, join the debates with hundreds of other crypto enthusiasts and skeptics!

Best,

Martin and Juan