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Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Once, cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin were popular among digital currency collectors—usually young technology savvy investors—enchanted with the promise these currencies offer to solve the ills of a global economy. Like the monopoly of printing money by central banks.

More recently, cryptocurrencies have become popular with venture capitalists, as a way to quickly and easily amass big fortunes, much faster than investing in conventional start-ups.

How do they do that? Through Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), an alternative to crowdfunding that converts cryptocurrency profits into Bitcoin and other major cryptocurrencies, and eventually into fiat money, ie legal tender.

“Rather than tying up vast amounts of funds in a unicorn start up and waiting for the long play—an IPO or an acquisition—investors can see gains more quickly, and can pull profits out more easily, via ICOs,” says Richard Kastelein in the March 2017 issue of Harvard Business Review. “They simply need to convert their cryptocurrency profits into Bitcoin or Ether on any of the cryptocurrency exchanges that carry it, and then it’s easily converted to fiat currency via online services such as Coinsbank or Coinbase.”

In 2016, for instance, venture capitalists saw their investments in Monero and NEM soared 2000 percent. In March 2017, Ether doubled in value in just three days.  Then there’s Tezos blockchain project ICO, which has raised a record of $232m-worth of bitcoin and ether.

And the list gets longer by the day—see icorating.com. Among the early investors was legendary venture capitalist, Tim Draper of VC fund Draper Fisher Jurvetson, according to the same source, which has added to the cryptocurrency hype.

And, of course, there are the Bitcoin Investment Trust Shares that began trading in the OTC market late last year, gaining 290.48 percent, so far in 2017, leaving gold in the dust.

Source: Finance.yahoo.com 8/7/2017

To some, these astronomical gains bring back memories of the biotechnology bubble of the 1980s and the dot.com bubble of the 1990s, which turned into mania before they burst altogether. To others, it’s nonetheless a sound way to invest money in an ultra-low interest rate environment that undermines the very existence of national currencies.

In either case, the party is just beginning. The jump of venture capitalists into ICOs will add hype and buzz for cryptocurrencies, turning the bubble into mania before the party ends.



My recent book The Ten Golden Rules Of Leadership is published  by AMACOM, and can be found here. 

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