History is not on the side of the crypto’s grave dancers

Via Sovereign Man

by Simon Black

 

On June 12, 1817 in the city of Mannheim, Germany, a local inventor by the name of Karl von Drais unveiled a brand new, futuristic invention he had just developed.

It was called a laufmaschine, or “running machine” in German. And it was essentially the world’s first bicycle.

There were no pedals, no seat, and no chain to connect the wheels; the rider basically had to propel the laufmaschine with his feet, then balance on it once achieving sufficient momentum.

It was crude, but it worked. And von Drais showed off his machine to the world that summer day by riding 7 kilometers in roughly one hour.

The reaction was instantly divisive.

Some people thought the laufmachine was as significant as cave men inventing the wheel, and they envisioned a future world in which bicycles dominated transportation.

Others thought it was a silly, unnecessary, dangerous invention. And many in the press derided von Drais’s invention, pejoratively calling it a “dandy horse”.

Plus several governments, including in the United Kingdom, the US, and even Germany, banned its use for posing too much risk to pedestrians.

Nevertheless, the development of the bicycle persisted over the next several decades, and public interests grew.

By the early 1880s, cycling had become incredibly popular. Even the Queen of England owned a bicycle, making it highly fashionable among Britain’s elite.

The most advanced bicycle design in the world at that time was called the ‘penny-farthing,’ which is the one you’ve probably seen in old photos. It had one ridiculously large wheel, and one tiny wheel.

The penny-farthing was fast… but incredibly unstable. Cyclists cruising at high speed would often flip over the handlebars after hitting one of London’s many potholes– which they referred to as “taking a header”.

The rapidly growing popularity of bicycles prompted inventors and engineers across Europe to work feverishly on new, safer designs and innovations; there was so much brainpower devoted to cycling that, by 1896, a full 15% of British patents were issued for bicycle designs.

The entire industry exploded. Bicycle factories, tire factories, repair shops, and sales shops were everywhere.

In the city of Birmingham alone, the number of bicycle manufacturers grew from almost nothing in the early 1880s, to 177 by the mid 1890s.

‘Bicycle mania’ was in full swing. So naturally it didn’t take long for the bankers to get involved.

In 1895, 70 bicycle-related companies went public on stock exchanges in the United Kingdom. In 1896, that number swelled to 363. And just in the first six months of 1897, another 238 were listed.

Most of these companies were totally hollow; they had no useful intellectual property, no plan to generate revenue, no professional management or engineering talent, and no hope to generate profit.

They simply went to the market and said, “I’m in the bicycle business,” and their stock prices soared.

Bicycle stocks became so popular, and rose so quickly, that the Financial Times devoted a section of its daily newspaper to the industry. And Cycling magazine had a financial section discussing stock prices in the industry.

The air finally came out of the cycling sector in the middle of 1897, with the ‘Bicycle Index’ falling more than 70% from its peak by the end of 1898. By 1900, roughly HALF of the bicycle companies that had gone public were no longer in business.

Along the way, there were plenty of skeptics in the media who thought bicycle mania was a ‘scam’, or who thought the technology was a bunch of hooey. After the bust in the late 1890s, these same skeptics predictably began dancing on the graves of the fallen companies, convinced that they had been proven correct.

Except the skeptics weren’t correct.

When the bicycle bubble burst, the poor quality companies and idiotic designs all got washed away. But the great business and the great designs survived.

Dunlop Tires is a great example; it’s still one of the biggest tire brands in the world today, and it got its start during Bicycle Mania in 1890.

More importantly, the fundamental technology has proven to be extremely sound. Bicycles have become ubiquitous around the world. Plus they directly influenced the development of the automobile.

This is similar to many financial bubbles throughout history, especially those that are sparked by new trends and technologies.

There were plenty of idiotic ideas and useless companies that went public in the 1990s during the dot-com boom. And when the bubble burst, many of them were washed away forever.

But there are plenty of successful businesses which still dominate today, including Amazon, Google, and Nvidia, that were founded during the mania of the 1990s.

More importantly, the bursting of the dot-com bubble did not invalidate the potential of the Internet and how much it would change our lives.

And that leads me to where we are today. Cryptocurrency is the latest technology to go through this boom/bust cycle.

Crypto has actually gone through multiple boom/bust cycles in its relatively short existence; in the last cycle the price of Bitcoin fell 85% from its peak, before rising ~20x in the next cycle.

All along the way there have been skeptics calling cryptocurrency a ‘scam’ and ‘dangerous’.

(Remember, there was a time in the early 1800s when multiple governments even outlawed bicycles because they also considered that technology ‘dangerous’.)

The price of Bitcoin is now down ~70% from its most recent peak. And, almost on cue, the crypto grave-dancers (like Bill Gates) are now insisting that they were right for predicting its demise.

If history is any guide, this is pretty foolish.

The fact that a technology attracts manic boom/bust capital is no reflection on the technology itself. It is a reflection on the market’s tendency towards irrationality.

This was the case with bicycles and the Internet. And it will most likely be the case with crypto.

There will be plenty of crypto businesses, and many tokens themselves, that will (and should) go bust.

But there are still plenty of great projects and great ideas out there– most notably, the fundamental idea of having a decentralized financial system.

Our traditional financial system, dominated by clueless politicians and out of touch central bankers, has been a total disaster. It is responsible for the record-high debt and record-high inflation which are disrupting the lives of literally billions of people.

Given these conditions, the decentralized financial system that cryptocurrency represents makes more sense than ever. And the fact that Bitcoin is going through another ‘down phase’ in the market cycle bears absolutely no relevance to its value whatsoever.

History is almost invariably on the side of innovation. And there’s still an abundance of innovation in crypto.

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26 Comments
ran t 7
ran t 7
June 17, 2022 5:01 pm

“Our traditional financial system, dominated by clueless politicians and out of touch central bankers, has been a total disaster.”

no it hasn’t, it has been a brilliantly wild success.

“It is responsible for the record-high debt and record-high inflation which are disrupting the lives of literally billions of people.”

exactly.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 17, 2022 5:04 pm

I keep saying it over and over…..
crypto = finite supply of nothing

Machinist
Machinist
June 17, 2022 5:15 pm

Backed fully by the faith and credit of…
hackers?
Coinbase?
Politicians?
Unnamed others?
The “Grid’ ?
The so-called Block Chain?

The isolation from the markets and governments have worked out so well, so far. /s

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 17, 2022 5:17 pm

Wait, his example of a successful company from the start of the bicycle industry is Dunlap Tires?

So I guess we should just invest in crypto and hope these companies later switch to producing something useful.

fujigm
fujigm
June 17, 2022 5:18 pm

the crypto grave-dancers (like Bill Gates) are now insisting that they were right for predicting its demise.

Bill Gates?
The visionary man who once said nobody would ever need more than 640K of RAM?
That alone is a point in cryptos favor.
As a medium of transfer and ledger, crypto has validity.
As an “investment”, not so much.
After the “investment” mania ends, and volatility drops, it should be a useful method of balancing ledgers in and between dominant fiat currencies.
YMMV.

ran t 7
ran t 7
  fujigm
June 17, 2022 5:20 pm

upvoted for remembering the 640k thing.

Cedartown Mark
Cedartown Mark
  ran t 7
June 17, 2022 9:57 pm

He meant to say 640megabytes of ram.

Ken31
Ken31
  ran t 7
June 17, 2022 10:56 pm

I had to design a boot sequence for a Marine Corps early internet program because the people at HQ had better computers than line units. It shut down half the Marine Corps for a couple of weeks. I had the solution to them the day after the problem. The bureaucracy took it and released it almost two weeks later, because they didn’t like that it came from a line unit (or more likely didn’t read it, even though it came from my PERSO, because what do grunts know). At least our battalion and the neighboring ones could keep working.

It had to do with the 640k boot memory.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  fujigm
June 17, 2022 5:31 pm

…”dominant fiat currencies”…
That’s the problem, it’s ALL fake.
I don’t care what anybody says, binary code can be hacked, which makes crypto high risk.
I repeat. Finite supply of nothing. It’s a Ponzi and an experiment at the same time.

fujigm
fujigm
  Anonymous
June 18, 2022 1:22 pm

May be.
But that does not eliminate the necessity of interaction using the dominant fiat currencies, even in the black market.
Certainly, your personal fallback stores of value should be PMs, ORD, and shelf stable foods, with a smattering of tobacco and alcohol.
Trade happens in whatever people will accept.
And the majority still accept fiat.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  fujigm
June 18, 2022 1:37 pm

“And the majority still accept fiat.”

They will after the crash too. The same people who can’t figure out that covid is a scam will still have faith in fiat currency even when the “full faith and credit” government no longer exists. Plenty have no concept of fiat in the first place. They actually think a dollar bill is worth a dollar.

Swrichmond
Swrichmond
June 17, 2022 7:30 pm

You know they’re scared as fuck when they write a cryptocurrency article about…bicycles.

There will be cryptocurrencies in the future. There are major problems remaining to be worked out, not the least of which are:
1. Decades of adoption and near-universal acceptance
2. Government sanction

Bitcoin fanboys and their ridiculous belief in the mythogical Satoshi what’s his face are just proof there’s still a sucker born every minute. When it was at 66,000 they were saying it was going to 250,000.

IT’S A TRADE. AND YOU’RE SUCKERS.

Red River D
Red River D
  Swrichmond
June 17, 2022 11:22 pm

At least McAfee doesn’t have to eat his own dick like he promised.

Maybe he really DID kill himself!!! It would have been kind of tough to live that one down if he’d stuck around.

General
General
June 17, 2022 7:33 pm

I have dollars, precious metals (gold and silver), crypto, stocks, and land.

What’s been my best investment/speculation so far? Crypto by a huge margin even after the current crash. Bitcoin would have to crash 75% more just for me to hit breakeven.

Even if you don’t invest/speculate in Bitcoin or other cryptos, which is reasonable due to the volatility, they still work great as a payment mechanism.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 17, 2022 7:40 pm

Crypto sounds like a good idea. Except when the grid goes down. Or how about maybe it’s just to get us used to the idea a digital currency?

At a certain point I’d rather have food and ammo than crypto or even gold.

Ken31
Ken31
June 17, 2022 10:24 pm

Nobody with an IQ above 120 think crypto is anything but a combination of tulips and pipe dreams.

Marky
Marky
June 17, 2022 10:36 pm

Not buying the argument comparing it to the bicycle business. Crypto is not a physical tangible invention that will evolve into a practical application for everyday life. It will never impact the course of achievement and advancement of technology as the bicycle did. Its invisible for God’s sake and only exist in a VIRTUAL world meaning its NOT REAL Bitcoin will be erased during a cyber attack and grid down scenario when the time is right for the Central Banks to transition to global digital currencies. They will implement AI to sniff out and destroy the competition once they turn the power back on..

Ken31
Ken31
  Marky
June 18, 2022 3:41 am

The most obvious thing that unravels it are advances in computing.

Marky
Marky
  Ken31
June 18, 2022 12:33 pm

Exactly, a AI quantum computer hacks your crypto in bout .03 sec.

subwo
subwo
June 17, 2022 11:16 pm

crypto=fairy dust

Two if by sea.
Two if by sea.
June 17, 2022 11:19 pm

Too many commenters saying bitcoins an either/ or financial vehicle when it’s actually a mere addendum.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 18, 2022 12:32 am

Article summation. A good bicycle may soon be worth it’s weight in gold.

bigfoot
bigfoot
June 18, 2022 4:42 am

When you cross a border with more than $10k, the guardians at the gate will confiscate your money. You could cross that same border with any amount of Bitcoin, the magical stuff none of you want.

But wait, that money, er bank note, er debt, is fairy dust that we all agree to use, foul weather or not, as in the tsunami of Fed printing. But yeah, that stuff is real and in the bank. We know that because our balances are printed out for us to look at in wonder that things work so well for us. Oh but when the power goes down, crypto will be worth nothing! But the dollars in the bank have magical qualities and will be fine, right?

The money we all love is controlled by the big boys. We be fine with that. Keep it up, boys! Sometimes we do wonder how much over a hundred bucks it will cost to fill up with gas next month? Someday, cryptos will find a level and then won’t we be sad not to have some? Nah.

bigfoot
bigfoot
  bigfoot
June 18, 2022 4:47 am

incidentally, the last time this subject was taken up with glee is when Bitcoin fell to $3000 from around $20,000. It was a fun time for many.

Swrichmond
Swrichmond
  bigfoot
June 18, 2022 8:11 am

You should definitely buy some more right away.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  bigfoot
June 18, 2022 12:55 pm

It was a fun time for many.

Um, isn’t the flip side of that, “it was terrible for many more?”

Someone paid $20k before it fell to $3k.

It will be a similar “fun time for many” when the $3k buyers are selling at $12 too.

Or it goes to $200k and some people get rich. It is gambling, plain and simple. Some win, many lose.