As the benefits of the new technologies become clear and financial inclusion increases, the ship will have sailed for the Federal Reserve to get fully on board with the new frontier of investing and consumerism.
“The Fed is in listening mode and hasn’t said much, and the rest of us will wait and see what guidance comes out. But the rest of the world isn’t waiting on the Fed… the rest of the world is seeing value in the second source of monetary sovereignty that disintermediates the Fed…we’ll see how that shakes out,” said Matthew Sigel, Head of Digital Assets Research at VanEck.
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“The Federal Reserve is afraid of losing its monopoly over the manufacturing of money. These are decentralized communities that have their own economies denominated in money that is not backed by the full faith of credit of the United States, so they are truly bottoms up network effect economies. They are equalizing in a great sense geopolitically, which is why you see that some of the countries that are on the fringes of our financial system who have loans from the IMF in danger of default, like El Salvador, are increasingly looking at cryptocurrencies as a way around that yolk of dollar colonialism that has been tethering them for decades,” he added.
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