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The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has not convinced European Central Bank (ECB) officials that the flagship cryptocurrency is a good investment.
The bankâs executives suggested that Bitcoin has failed to become a global decentralized crypto and is instead plagued by fraud and price manipulation.
BTC ETF Approvals Compared To âNaked Emperorâs New Clothesâ
The European Central Bank is still not a fan of Bitcoin, despite the recently approved spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) boosting the institutional legitimacy of the broader crypto industry.
In a February 22 blog post, ECB Director General for Market Infrastructure and Payments Ulrich Bindseil and Advisor JĂźrgen Schaaf described the U.S. SECâs greenlighting of spot Bitcoin ETFs as âthe naked emperorâs new clothes.â
According to the officials, the landmark approval of 11 ETFs and the billions of dollars that have flowed into the market doesnât alter the fact that âBitcoin is not suitable as a means of payment or as an investment.â
âFor disciples, the formal approval confirms that Bitcoin investments are safe, and the preceding rally is proof of an unstoppable triumph. We disagree with both claims and reiterate that the fair value of Bitcoin is still zero,â the central bankers postulated.
Apart from stating Bitcoinâs oft-cited shortcomings, such as high volatility, cost, slow transactions, and high energy consumption in the mining process, the ECB executives cited three drivers of the latest bull rally.
âThe ongoing manipulation of the âpriceâ in an unregulated market without oversight and without fair value, the growing demand for the âcurrency of crime,â and shortcomings in the authoritiesâ judgments and measuresâ will buoy the price in the short term, but âthere is no fair value from which serious forecasts can be derived,â Bindseil and JĂźrgen explained.
According to them, Bitcoin is also unsuitable as an investment, as it doesnât generate any cash flow or dividends, cannot be used productively like commodities and offers no social benefit or subjective appreciation based on outstanding abilities.
âLess financially knowledgeable retail investors are attracted by the fear of missing out, leading them to potentially lose their money,â the bankers added.
âDead Cat Bouncingâ
ECBâs latest criticism of Bitcoin follows its November 2022 report, noting that the benchmark cryptocurrency was on its âlast gasp before the road to irrelevanceâ â comments that preceded a bear market bottom after the implosion of Sam Bankman-Friedâs digital asset exchange FTX.
At this time, the central bank officials claimed that the belief Bitcoin would continue soaring was wrong. But, Bitcoin would ultimately bottom out at around $16,200 in late November 2022, just a week after the post, and has since skyrocketed by over 200% to $51,670 at press time, according to CoinGecko data.
Answering their own question âWhy is this dead cat bouncing so high,â the ECB executives indicated that the January spot ETF approvals, Bitcoinâs impending halving event, and the hopes of an about-face in Federal Reserveâs interest rate policy were responsible for the bullish price action.