ST. MORITZ â The United States may be entering a second Cold War, according to some investors, who seem mildly curious but otherwise unconcerned about the prospect.
âItâs a kind of Cold War, but not just for crypto,â said Multicoin Capitalâs Beijing-based partner Mable Jiang. âCurrency is the leverage.â
Jiang said Chinaâs goal is to leverage the rise of cryptocurrency, including both domestic bitcoin mining and a state-issued digital currency, to supplant the dollar and become the worldâs leading economic power. Such rivalries feel lightyears away in the frosted Swiss alps, which are teeming with high-net-worth individuals soaking up the last few days of politician-free ski slopes before the World Economic Forum in Davos.
Roughly 250 people gathered at the Crypto Finance Conference St. Moritz this week, hosted in a luxurious mountain getaway at 6,000 feet, for a series of talks that largely revolve around embracing strict compliance standards. (Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss took a break from skiing to argue that thorough regulatory standards could help the U.S. retain its leading role in the global financial system.)
For crypto conference regulars who recall the post-2017 token boom correction, this gathering might feel like falling into a time machine, complete with security token sales and closed-loop stablecoins. Meanwhile, the World Economic Forum (WEF) worked with 38 central banks around the world in 2019 to develop digital payment or asset strategies, according to Sheila Warren, the WEFâs head of blockchain and distributed ledger technology. From Cambodia to Colombia, many emerging nations plan to launch operational stablecoin projects, beyond pilots, in 2020.
âThereâs this sense that they [emerging economies] could actually benefit from pegging a stablecoin to a basket of currencies in a way that they canât currently do if they issue paper money,â Warren said.
Today, most global commerce relies on dollars in some fashion. Warren said thereâs âcertainly an interestâ among emerging economies in developing systems that donât pass through New York clearinghouses. Thatâs where Jiang said the Chinese plans for a digital RMB currency come in.
âItâs not actually for people who live in China. They have WeChat or AliPay,â she said. âItâs another global settlement currency, including for developing countries around the world, which they [the Chinese] are friends with.â
Warren said the U.S. would likely resist systems that circumnavigate the dollar, adding Chinese government officials are actively participating in talks related to the WEFâs blockchain initiative. ConsenSys, the Ethereum Foundation and the Ethereum Enterprise Alliance are among the companies consulting leaders in those emerging economies, she said.
However, Warren added, the WEF doesnât make those introductions nor recommend any country issue a digital currency. It merely offers guidelines and support to decision makers in emerging economies. Carmen Benitez, CEO of the Switzerland-based startup Fetch Blockchain LTD, heads yet another firm consulting countries eager to issue a cryptocurrency.
âThey approached us,â Benitez said of her clients in the Colombian presidentâs office, which is setting up a bank-managed stablecoin for government projects in 2020. âThey want a coin ⦠they like the idea of keeping [the economic flow] as closed as possible with the coin.â
Cypherpunks might argue a state- or bank-issued currency with strict limitations imposed by the issuer bears little resemblance to âcryptocurrency.â But that doesnât deter the blockchain fans gathered at St. Moritz.Â
Benitez said using a blockchain-based currency would provide better transparency and automation than Colombiaâs current, paperwork-heavy system. Likewise, most attendees appeared more excited about fitting tokens into a traditional banking framework than they were about innovations like the Lightning Network, for example.
âStablecoins and central bank digital currencies will be [widespread] in just a few years,â said Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist of Hamburg Commercial Bank. âEven if Libra doesnât come true, there will be another privately issued stablecoin backed by fiat currencies.â
To many of these attendees, bitcoin offers a welcome diversification of investment options. Indeed, Grayscale director Michael Sonnenshein said the firm garnered more assets in 2019 than all previous years combined, leading to a total of $2.4 billion worth of crypto under management. Bitcoin products are still the most popular, although altcoin dips donât deter investors.Â
âWe saw stronger inflows into our ethereum product last year,â Sonnenshein said. âInvestors are looking at more than just bitcoin.âÂ
Generally speaking, self-custody isnât a priority for such institutional, European clients. This bothers Pascal Gauthier, CEO of hardware wallet company Ledger, who said thereâs scant focus on secure custody as Europe is regulating bitcoin-related activities âvery heavily, very quickly.â
European regulations like AMLD5 require all companies involved with money transmission, potentially including lightning liquidity providers, decentralized finance (DeFi) products like Compound and custodial wallets, behave more like banks in 2020 by collecting know-your-customer (KYC) information. This even applies to small startups working with microtransactions. Plus, the Financial Action Task Force established new rules that may force exchanges to collect more information related to addresses that users send crypto to in 2020.
Although no one knows for sure how these rules will play out, as they appear difficult to enforce, veteran bitcoiner Joseph Weinberg, co-founder of the Shyft Network, said he worries this approach may be regulating away censorship-resistance.
âLightning applications may be accepting micropayments but acting as hubs, so if you think about being a payment channel provider, youâre effectively involved as an intermediary,â he said. âAt the end of the day, this is all about sanctions.â
WEFâs Warren agreed dominant economic players, like the U.S., are now tightening the reins on activities with the potential to circumnavigate sanctions.
Some digital fiat advocates believe blockchain technology could even make sanctions more effective.Â
Former Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Chairman J. Christopher Giancarlo, who recently became co-founder of the Digital Dollar Foundation to advocate for a central bank digital currency (CBDC) from the U.S., said the term Cold War was a wee bit âstrongâ for disparity between the U.S. and China. Yet he generally agreed the economic rivalry was reminiscent of âthe race to land on the moon.â
âMany other global powers are looking to assert their own currency as an important reserve currency,â Giancarlo said. âA digital dollar allows for a more scalpel-like approach to sanctions.â  Â
On the other hand, de la Rubia said it would take a long time for any digital currency to rival the U.S. dollarâs global dominance. He argued that the European Union (EU) would love for Saudi Arabia to price oil contracts in Euros, yet the EU has been unable to contradict the dollarâs supreme liquidity.
âBitcoin will always be volatile, with supply well-defined and demand moving,â he said. âAs long as China has international capital controls, it will be hard for the yuan to take over, even as a digital currency.âÂ
When asked about bitcoin, Giancarlo preferred to compare Facebookâs Libra project to his own Digital Dollar aspirations and the yuan.Â
âOnly one of those three [currency issuers] would be constitutionally prohibited from mining that data for any purpose other than illicit use,â he said. âA digital Yuan will absolutely be monitored by the government for many purposes ⦠a commercial venture absolutely will mine that data to say whether you are shopping at Nordstrom or at Target.â
Giancarlo said he wants to dedicate the rest of his career to modernizing Americaâs financial infrastructure, and he sees a blockchain-based fiat currency as a part of that.Â
He would not say what role bitcoin might play in that future. Instead, he said thereâs an increasing interest in exploring âlegitimate and positive use cases.â
Currency is, after all, a tool for political leverage. And although âblockchainâ is on the tips of everyoneâs tongue this time of year in Switzerland, few people at St. Moritz acknowledge the role a decentralized cryptocurrency might play beyond an investing hedge.
Those who are bullish on bitcoin, not just blockchain, are left wondering how bitcoin can be a geopolitical hedge if most conduits for moving money around the ecosystem are essentially banks.