Long time cryptocurrency skeptic Jamie Dimon, CEO of banking giant JPMorgan, has doubled down on his dislike of decentralized digital assets and likened crypto to useless pet rocks.
In an interview with CNBCs Squawk Box show on Tuesday, Dimon referred to crypto as a complete sideshow and said the broadcaster spends too much time [focusing] on it.
Cryptocurrencies that dont do anything, I dont understand why people spend any time [thinking about them], he said, adding that JPMorgan was not even sure that [Bitcoin] is a real market.
Crypto tokens are like pet rocks, he said, adding that people were just hyping this stuff up.
Issuing a warning to the American public, Dimon also pointed out that in the trading of Bitcoin there was at least $20 to $30 billion of ransomware involved, and said the cryptocurrency was plagued with other corruption problems like money laundering, terrorism financing, tax avoidance and sex trafficking.
Why do we allow this stuff to take place? he questioned. I think the regulators that have beat up on banks should maybe focus a little more on crypto.
Dimon has long been a vocal critic of cryptocurrencies, previously referring to the digital tokens as a decentralized Ponzi scheme that is dangerous and not good for anybody.
The JPMorgan chief, who refuses to refer to crypto assets as currencies, said in October last year that Bitcoin was worthless. At the time, its value was approaching an all-time high.
While he doubled down on his aversion to cryptocurrencies on Tuesday, Dimon defended the blockchain technology that underpins their use, saying that his opinions on crypto does not mean that blockchain isnt real.
JPMorgan, and Dimon himself, have long been backers of Blockchain technology, with the bank being the first in America to create and successfully test a digital coin representing a fiat currencyin this case, the U.S. dollar. The JPM Coin, enabled by Blockchain, is used by the bank to carry out intraday repurchase agreements.
What will Bitcoin cost in 2023 and beyond?
Bitcoin, like all cryptocurrencies, is a risky and highly volatile investment, making it difficult to predict exactly how the market will play out in the short and long term.
The digital asset, which was trading at around $13,800 at 7 a.m. ET on Wednesday has lost more than 60% of its value in 2022, as cryptocurrencies across the board have suffered a widespread selloff thats become known as the crypto winter.
At its all-time high, Bitcoin was worth $56,580, according to figures from Coinbase.
However, Bitcoin has recovered from rough years before.
In 2014, its value more than halved, leaving the token trading at just $334 by the end of the year, and in 2018, it nosedived again, losing 84% of its worth.
Its worst-ever loss was in 2010, when it shed more than 92% from its then all-time high of around $30.
Despite turbulence in the market, Ark Invests CEO Cathie Wood has stood by her call that Bitcoin will hit $1 million by 2030. Meanwhile, billionaire investor and CEO of Galaxy Digital Mike Novogratz still believes it will climb to a value of $500,000but not within five years, as he previously forecast.
Bitcoin price headed for $5,000?
Its downfall this year is reflective of the wider crypto market, which reached a market cap of $3 trillion in Nov. 2021, but is now a market worth around $850 billion.
The sell-off, exacerbated by the implosion of major crypto exchange FTX in November, has led to speculation over whether the world is witnessing the end of crypto, with some heralding FTXs collapse as the cryptocurrency markets Lehman moment.
In a research note on Sunday, Standard Chartereds Global Head of Research, Eric Robertsen, warned that investors could be caught off guard by a surprise Bitcoin plunge that would send the digital asset a further 70% lower in 2023.
Robertsen said that this would see Bitcoins value shredded to just $5,000.
Meanwhile, JPMorgans analysts believe that its bottom is still yet to be reached, with the bank predicting in November that it will drop to around $13,000 while the crypto market suffers a cascade of margin calls.
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