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May 31, 2018

Can Bitcoin and Cryptocurrency Really Replace Banks?

By Daily Hodl Staff

Bitcoin is still in a bear market, trading at $7,564 with a 24-hour high of $7,689 at time of press, according to WorldCoinIndex. Recent media coverage of the world’s most popular cryptocurrency continues to highlight its volatility, its rate of adoption and its impact on the perception of cryptocurrencies at large.

Bitcoin is in the early adoption phase with a limited number of merchants accepting it as a form of payment. It has several main rivals: Ethereum, a cryptocurrency that is also a platform for smart contracts on the blockchain; Bitcoin Cash, a fork of Bitcoin with a larger block size designed for greater scalability; Ripple, a blockchain payment solution platform with a native cryptocurrency (XRP), which several banks are test piloting; and many other cryptocurrencies that behave like Bitcoin but with lower fees and faster transaction speeds.

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Cryptocurrencies have different consensus protocols for verifying transactions but all of them provide enough functionality, either discretely or in concert with one another, to perform banking functions.

As cryptocurrencies emerge into the mainstream, crossing over into e-commerce platforms, donation centers, loyalty points programs, political campaigns and wages, a hybrid system is developing. Banks and multinational corporations are integrating more blockchain technologies, but these developments fundamentally differ from the core mission of the thousands of cryptocurrency projects that are designed to eliminate centralized bodies, giving control of big data and personal data, and ownership of money, back to the people.

Digital currencies developed by banks will flow through private, centralized networks as opposed to a network like Bitcoin, which is public and decentralized. Banks will either use digital ledger technology, like blockchain, to build highly centralized networks to compete vigorously with decentralized networks or die with their slow legacy systems.

They will also focus on security and champion blockchain to create trusted, frictionless environments where disparate parties can confidently come together and use smart contracts to verify identities, confirm payments, manage receipts, vet documents and execute agreements.

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But will the banking model best the decentralized model? Will the Millennials who are driving the cryptocurrency movement want to remain cradled in the arms of banks, or will they want to forge their own decentralized paths?

As for cryptocurrencies replacing banks, the technology is there. It is also expanding and improving as developers work to address the needs of future customers who prefer a decentralized future.

Here is a list of banking services and their cryptocurrency counterparts.

Banking Service Cryptocurrency Cryptocurrency Service
Send money and receive deposits Bitcoin
Bitcoin Cash
Ethereum
Ripple
Litecoin
IOTA
Dash

Monero
Vertcoin
Smart Cash
several others
Send money and receive deposits
Raising capital (IPO) Any token sale (new crypto) Raising capital (ICO)
Secure loans Ethlend
Salt
several others
Secure loans
Payment agent for high-volume, cross-border transactions Ripple


Stellar

Payment network for high-volume, cross-border transactions; permissioned ledger

Payment network for high-volume, cross-border transactions; open ledger

Payment agent for cross-border transaction or domestic bank wire Bitcoin
Bitcoin Cash
Ethereum
Ripple
Litecoin
IOTA
Dash

Monero
Vertcoin
Smart Cash
several others
Domestic transactions, cross-border transactions
ATMs Bitcoin ATMs
Savings account Bitcoin
Bitcoin Cash
Basis
Stasis
MakerDao
several others
Store of value
Store of value
Stable coin
Stable coin
Stable coin
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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed at The Daily Hodl are not investment advice. Investors should do their due diligence before making any high-risk investments in Bitcoin, cryptocurrency or digital assets. Please be advised that your transfers and trades are at your own risk, and any losses you may incur are your responsibility. The Daily Hodl does not recommend the buying or selling of any cryptocurrencies or digital assets, nor is The Daily Hodl an investment advisor. Please note that The Daily Hodl participates in affiliate marketing.