Freedom4um

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: ECB Head Christine Lagarde Calls For Global Regulation of “Reprehensible” Bitcoin
Source: Summit News
URL Source: https://summit.news/2021/01/13/ecb- ... tion-of-reprehensible-bitcoin/
Published: Jan 14, 2021
Author: Paul Joseph Watson
Post Date: 2021-01-14 10:43:11 by Esso
Keywords: None
Views: 779
Comments: 18

“Bitcoin has conducted some funny business.”

Head of the European Central Bank Christine Lagarde has called for global regulations on Bitcoin, labeling the cryptocurrency “reprehensible.”

Lagarde made the comments during a Reuters Next conference earlier today, during which she asserted that Bitcoin was not a currency.

“When you look at the most recent developments upward, and now the recent downward trend … for those who have assumed that it might turn into a currency, terribly sorry but this is an asset and it is a highly speculative asset,” she said.

#Bitcoin ‘has conducted some funny business and some interesting and totally reprehensible money laundering activity,' @ECB President Christine Lagarde said at the #ReutersNext conference https://reut.rs/2LLb5GK

The former head of the IMF, who was previously found guilty of financial negligence by a French court over a €403 million arbitration deal in favor of businessman Bernard Tapie, went on to accuse Bitcoin of being heavily embroiled in criminal activity.

“(Bitcoin) has conducted some funny business and some interesting and totally reprehensible money laundering activity,” said Lagarde.

The ECB head went on to call for Bitcoin to be regulated by financial authorities.

“There has to be regulation. This has to be applied and agreed upon […] at a global level because if there is an escape that escape will be used,” she said.

Globalists and technocrats have long begrudged Bitcoin because it is decentralized and therefore impossible to come under the control of centralized financial institutions. The cryptocurrency has also provided a refuge for dissidents who have been deplatformed by regular financial services and institutions over their politics.

Bitcoin recently soared to a record high above $41,000 dollars but has since fallen back to around $35,000 dollars.

After the cryptocurrency previously hit a record high of above $17,000 dollars at the end of 2017 it then sank bank to around $3,000, emphasizing the wild volatility of the asset.

However, numerous analysts are predicting that growing debt, record money printing and hyperinflation could see Bitcoin soar into the hundreds of thousands over the next year.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 5.

#3. To: Esso (#0)

There numbers are off. The recent high was 42,000, and it fell to about 31,500. Now it's trending back up at about 38k. Er, checking it just now it's at 39.7k.

The previous high low was just shy of 20k and it did fall to a low of 3.5k around March of 2020, in part due to the strength of the dollar as everyone was selling stock (increasing demand for dollars and therefore increasing the value) when the lockdowns began.

Pinguinite  posted on  2021-01-14   11:05:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Pinguinite (#3)

The previous high low was just shy of 20k and it did fall to a low of 3.5k around March of 2020...

Not sure that my heart could stand that roller coaster. Wow, what a ride.

Lod  posted on  2021-01-14   11:17:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 5.

#7. To: Lod (#5)

Not sure that my heart could stand that roller coaster. Wow, what a ride.

It's not much of a roller coaster when it take 2.25 years to make the run.

But to compare swings in crypto to stocks is errant, really, I think. All you do is scale the amount of money you put in to the volatility. If you have 10k to put in stocks expecting a 5% swing to be huge, and crypto swings by 25%, then all you do to get the same risk is put 2k into crypto and you get it. 25% of 2k is 500. 5% of 10k is also 500.

There need not be any leveraging, and there shouldn't with crypto, and without leveraging you only lose everything if it goes to zero, and crypto ain't going to zero. It's here to stay and to sit is cash when the US and feds are pumping new cash into the economy ain't smart in my view.

Crypto won't die. The last time I paid cash for bitcoin the price was around 4k. I correctly identified the bottom then and am a happy camper now. Before that I bought it regularly in the mid 6k range, but wasn't much concerned at all when it dropped to 4k.

Pinguinite  posted on  2021-01-14 11:39:57 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 5.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest