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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

7 responses to “The Ultimate Stablecoin, Report 18 Nov 2018”

  1. TARCO International plans to create a “crypto bank” that will take in gold-backed crypto as deposits. The bank will issue a second crypto-currency that represents IOU notes denominated in gold. This will allow holders of gold-backed crypto to avoid the transaction fees and storage fees associated with. The bank will also pay an interest rate to depositors, which it will recoup by lending the notes out to Dapp developers. Or, at least, that is my understanding of how it is going to work. The CEO mentions it at about 8 minutes into this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTajY0Iub0w

    The problem with doing this right now is that we do not yet have an exchange-traded gold-backed crypto. Digix, for example, is not available on exchanges. TARCO believes it will be able to fix this problem with its new gold-backed crypto that will be released early next year. The CEO says that he has deals in the works with several exchanges and that the crypto community “will be surprised” at how many exchanges are going to carry it. But creating a crypto bank is a further step that will take more time.

    Keith, you might want to contact Thierry Arys Ruiz and see if you can be of assistance. There may be some role you can play in this.

  2. It’s always a pleasure to read your reflections. Conceptually I like a BullionVault account and the idea of frictionless internet money based on precious metals but I have my doubts about the freedom of internet transactions during a crisis. It will not be possible to move “value” out of the country or even operate anonymously with one’s own money. The idea is for everything to be known and then it will be decided politically what is “fair”. I wrote a piece several (http://alabikedr.blogspot.com/2014/05/some-reflections-about-debt-and-gold.html) years ago on my blog:

  3. Truly a fascinating article, Keith.

    You didn’t quite sell me on the conclusion that cryptocurrency solves some useful piece of the proposed transition to a yield on gold. It’s just a distributed ledger to record that you exchanged gold for crypto. Now you need a third-party to, at minimum, recognize your crypto account as meaningful collateral and/or be willing to accept your crypto as payment for goods and services. They’ll want additional transaction fees for doing so, above and beyond what they already charge the users of the legacy currency. I think any currency (crypto or not) that has to compete with an entrenched domestic fiat currency is going to inevitably have too much “friction”, even if the establishment types weren’t seeking to oppose it.

    In my skeptical mind, cryptocurrency remains as just an interesting solution desperately searching for a matching problem.

  4. Keith been following you for a number of years love your work one aspect of the fundamental price in both Gold and Silver seems to be that 90% of the time actual is around 5-10% below fundamental. Over time you would expect price to converge any ideas on why the actual trails fundamental most of the time.

  5. Excellent article once again, Keith! As you may recall, I hold similar hopes for digital forms of gold money, but I see some game-stopper issues with the notion of “one blockchain to bind them all.” In my current sketch for digital bills of exchange, each bill is its own ICO; its block chain expires at bill maturity. Redemption (in whatever money the bill has been drawn) is then forced onto the current owners, however they’re distributed, but is accomplished entirely on the books of a few banks, brokers, and clearing houses. Data integrity of the blockchain (which in distributed cryptocurrencies is enforced by proofs of work or stakeholding) is treated no differently than any other chain of (cryptographically-signed) contracts by identifiable legal persons. Integrity is only a benefit to the current stakeholders and the secondary listing agents, they must be the ones to incur its (small) costs. But integrity is a different market good than the monetary asset, and should be purchased as subjectively needed by the participants. With a multiplicity of short term, expiring, ICO bills, the cost of integrity monitoring, which is proportional to n log(n) [n=size of the bill’s set of stakeholders], need never grow burdensome to a typical small transaction. The fundamental value of the bill is of course the short term clearing credit it draws upon, and that value must always be ascertained (as it was for the bills of exchange you referenced) by the due diligence of the stakeholders on the blockchain. They will continually be supporting this work by altering their asking price–there is a body of economic game theory dedicated to the art of bill mongering, which we can assume all market participants will learn to respect.

    Cryptographic security need extend no longer than term of the bill. Likewise the historical records that constitute the data integrity problem are also limited to that 90-180 day window of time. Many of the scaling problems in the cryptocurrency game are rendered moot by the rules of bill circulation. I believe this idea has a natural economic niche in the same way gold does. We can work out the ideas and their kinks, but the work may lay dormant until the day money once more needs natural law foundations, as it inevitably will.

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