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John Kiff

Bitcoin Is Still Concentrated in Few Hands, Study Finds - 0 views

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    "According to a study by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the top 10,000 individual investors in Bitcoin control about one-third of the cryptocurrency in circulation. By using a data collection method that differentiated between addresses belonging to intermediaries and individuals, NBER researchers were able to find the former controlled about 5.5 million Bitcoin at the end of last year while the latter controlled about 8.5 million. Additionally, the top 1,000 individual investors controlled about 3 million, and the concentration could be even greater. The concentration of miners is even more profound, data show. NBER found that the top 10% of miners control 90% of the Bitcoin mining capacity, and just 0.1% (about 50 miners) control 50% of mining capacity. Such a high concentration could make the Bitcoin network vulnerable to a 51% attack. NBER found the concentration also decreases following sharp increases in the Bitcoin price, meaning the probability the network is vulnerable to a 51% attack is higher when Bitcoin's price drops sharply."
John Kiff

CBDCs, Payment Firms, and Geopolitics - 0 views

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    The U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) published a paper that analyzes the effect of a major central bank digital currency (CBDC) - the digital euro - on the payment industry, finding "remarkably" heterogeneous effects. Stock prices of U.S. payment firms decrease, while stock prices of European payment firms increase in response to positive announcements on the digital euro. Bank stocks do not react. The results are consistent with the notion that the development of the digital euro is driven by a desire for strategic autonomy in payments, pointing to a novel geopolitical dimension of CBDCs.
John Kiff

Design Choices for Central Bank Digital Currency: Policy and Technical Considerations - 0 views

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    An NBER paper enumerates the fundamental technical design challenges facing CBDC designers, with a particular focus on performance, privacy, and security. Through a survey of relevant academic and industry research and deployed systems, it discusses the state of the art in technologies that can address the challenges involved in successful CBDC deployment. It also present a vision of the rich range of functionalities and use cases that a well-designed CBDC platform could ultimately offer users.
John Kiff

Are Cryptocurrencies Currencies? Bitcoin as Legal Tender in El Salvador - 0 views

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    This US National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) paper reports the results of a representative national face-to-face survey of bitcoin's usage in El Salvador, since the government made bitcoin legal tender and launched its "Chivo" bitcoin wallet, giving major incentives to download it. The results show that, despite the government's "big push" and a large fraction of people downloading Chivo Wallet, usage of bitcoin for everyday transactions is low and is concentrated among the banked, educated, young, and male population.
John Kiff

Strategic Complementarities in a Dynamic Model of Technology Adoption: P2P Digital Paym... - 0 views

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    The NBER published a paper develops a dynamic model of technology adoption featuring strategic complementarities: the benefits of usage increase with the number of adopters. It studies the diffusion of new means of payments, where such complementarities are pervasive. It shows that complementarities give rise to multiple equilibria, suboptimal allocations, and study the planner's problem. The model generates gradualism in adoption, as individuals optimally wait for others to adopt before doing so. It applies the theory to the adoption of SINPE, an electronic peer-to-peer (P2P) payment app developed by the Central Bank of Costa Rica. A calibrated version of the model shows that the optimal subsidy pushes the economy to universal adoption.
John Kiff

A Simple Model of a Central Bank Digital Currency - 0 views

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    The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) published a paper that highlights the trade-offs between physical and digital forms of retail central bank money based on a general equilibrium model. It finds that the key differences between cash and central bank digital currency (CBDC) include transaction efficiency, possibilities for tax evasion, and, potentially, nominal rates of return. It establishes conditions under which cash and CBDC can co-exist and shows how government policies can influence relative holdings of cash, CBDC, and other assets. The paper illustrates how a CBDC can facilitate negative nominal interest rates and helicopter drops, and also how a CBDC can be structured to prevent capital flight from other assets.
John Kiff

FinTech Lending with LowTech Pricing - 0 views

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    The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) published a paper that questions Fintech lending's ability to spot good credit risks missed by big banks and traditional lenders, providing people with affordable loans they might not otherwise be able to access. Using a comprehensive dataset of FinTech personal loans, the paper shows that Fintech lender loan rates continue to rely heavily on conventional credit scores, including 45% higher rates for nonprime borrowers. Other known default predictors are often neglected. Within each segment (prime/nonprime) loan rates are not very responsive to default risk, resulting in realized loan-level returns decreasing with risk.
John Kiff

Leverage and Stablecoin Pegs - 0 views

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    The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) published a paper that shows how stablecoins can maintain a constant price even though they face run risk and pay no interest. Stablecoin holders are indirectly compensated for stablecoin run risk because they can lend the coins to levered traders. Levered traders are willing to pay a premium to borrow stablecoins when speculative demand is strong. Therefore, the stablecoin can support a $1 peg even with higher levels of run risk. However, when speculative demand falls, stablecoin issuers can keep their debt trading at par only by moving to a safer portfolio or allowing redemptions. Such reallocation or change in stablecoin supply can cause disruptions in the real economy. Stablecoin issuers will need to adjust quickly if expected returns for cryptocurrencies fall; otherwise, they face the risk of collapse. These adjustments can cause disruptions in the markets they invest in, like the commercial paper market that provides financing to the real economy.
John Kiff

Retail CBDC Impact on Digital Payments and Bank Deposits: Evidence from India - 0 views

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    The NBER published an empirical analysis utilizing detailed transaction data from India's digital rupee pilot to explore the dynamics between central bank digital currency (CBDC) and existing digital payment methods, as well as the implications of increased CBDC usage on traditional bank deposits. It finds that policies that increase transaction costs for current digital payment methods catalyze a substitution effect, bolstering CBDC adoption. Furthermore, an uptick in CBDC usage is associated with a notable decline in bank, cash, and savings deposits, suggesting potential paths to bank disintermediation.
John Kiff

On Fintech and Financial Inclusion - 0 views

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    "The nature of fixed versus variable costs in robo-advising is likely to democratize access to financial services. Big data is likely to reduce the impact of negative prejudice in the credit market but it could reduce the effectiveness of existing policies aimed at protecting minorities.
John Kiff

The Digitalization of Money - 0 views

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    The ongoing digital revolution may lead to a radical departure from the traditional model of monetary exchange. We may see an unbundling of the separate roles of money, creating fiercer competition among specialized currencies. On the other hand, digital currencies associated with large platform ecosystems may lead to a re-bundling of money in which payment services are packaged with an array of data services, encouraging differentiation but discouraging interoperability between platforms. Digital currencies may also cause an upheaval of the international monetary system: countries that are socially or digitally integrated with their neighbors may face digital dollarization, and the prevalence of systemically important platforms could lead to the emergence of digital currency areas that transcend national borders. Central bank digital currency ensures that public money remains a relevant unit of account.
John Kiff

FinTech, BigTech, and the Future of Banks - 0 views

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    "BigTech firms have unique advantages that banks cannot easily replicate and therefore present a much stronger challenge to established banks in consumer finance and loans to small firms. Both Fintech and BigTech are contributing to a secular trend of banks losing their comparative advantage as they have less access to unique information about parties seeking credit."
John Kiff

Banking, Trade, and the making of a Dominant Currency - 0 views

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    "We explore the interplay between trade invoicing patterns and the pricing of safe assets in different currencies. Our theory highlights the following points: 1) a currency's role as a unit of account for invoicing decisions is complementary to its role as a safe store of value; 2) this complementarity can lead to the emergence of a single dominant currency in trade invoicing and global banking, even when multiple large candidate countries share similar economic fundamentals; 3) firms in emerging-market countries endogenously take on currency mismatches by borrowing in the dominant currency; 4) the expected return on dominant-currency safe assets is lower than that on similarly safe assets denominated in other currencies, thereby bestowing an "exorbitant privilege" on the dominant currency. The theory thus provides a unified explanation for why a dominant currency is so heavily used in both trade invoicing and in global finance."
John Kiff

The Microeconomics of Cryptocurrencies - 0 views

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    This survey focuses on the microeconomics of cryptocurrencies; What drives their supply, demand, trading price and competition amongst them. This literature has been emerging over the past decade and the purpose of this paper is to summarize its main findings so as to establish a base upon which future research can be conducted.
John Kiff

Central Bank Digital Currencies, an Old Tale With a New Chapter - 0 views

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    "Michael Bordo and William Roberds consider the debut of a new monetary instrument, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). Drawing on examples from monetary history, they argue that a successful monetary transformation must combine microeconomic efficiency with macroeconomic credibility. A paradoxical feature of these transformations is that success in the micro dimension can encourage macro failure. Overcoming this paradox may require politically uncomfortable compromises. They propose that such compromises will be necessary for the success of CBDCs."
John Kiff

Banking on Uninsured Deposits - 0 views

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    "Motivated by the regional bank crisis of 2023, we model the impact of interest rates on the liquidity risk of banks. Prior work shows that banks hedge the interest rate risk of their assets with their deposit franchise: when interest rates rise, the value of the assets falls but the value of the deposit franchise rises. Yet the deposit franchise is only valuable if depositors remain in the bank. This creates run incentives for uninsured depositors. We show that a run equilibrium is absent at low interest rates but appears when rates rise because the deposit franchise comes to dominate the value of the bank. The liquidity risk of the bank thus increases with interest rates. We provide a formula for the bank's optimal risk management policy. The bank should act as if its deposit rate is more sensitive to market rates than it really is, i.e., as if its "deposit beta" is higher. This leads the bank to shrink the duration of its assets. Shortening duration has a downside, however: it exposes the bank to insolvency if interest rates fall. The bank thus faces a dilemma: it cannot simultaneously hedge its interest rate risk and liquidity risk exposures. The dilemma disappears only if uninsured deposits do not contribute to the deposit franchise (if they have a deposit beta of one). The recent growth of low-beta uninsured checking and savings accounts thus poses stability risks to banks. The risks increase with interest rates and are amplified by other exposures such as credit risk. We show how they can be addressed with an optimal capital requirement that rises with interest rates."
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