PWC Cryptocurrency Evolution
PWC Cryptocurrency Evolution
com/fsi
Money is no object:
Understanding the evolving
cryptocurrency market
What is cryptocurrency?
How might the technology
behind it disrupt financial
services? How might this
new market evolve?
Money is no object:
Understanding the evolving cryptocurrency market
An in-depth discussion
In recent years, cryptocurrencyand in
particular, Bitcoinhas demonstrated its
value, now boasting 14 million Bitcoins in
circulation.3 Investors speculating in the
future possibilities of this new technology
have driven most of the current market
capitalization, and this is likely to remain
the case until a certain measure of price
stability and market acceptance is achieved.
Apart from the declared price of
What is cryptocurrency?
A cryptocurrency is a medium of exchange such as the US dollar. Bitcoin, the first
cryptocurrency, appeared in January 2009 and was the creation of a computer
programmer using the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto.
Like the US dollar, cryptocurrency has no intrinsic value in that it is not
redeemable for another commodity, such as gold. Unlike the US dollar, however,
cryptocurrency has no physical form, is not legal tender, and is not currently
backed by any government or legal entity. In addition, its supply is not
determined by a central bank and the network is completely decentralized, with
all transactions performed by the users of the system.
The term cryptocurrency is used because the technology is based on public-key
cryptography, meaning that the communication is secure from third parties. This
is a well-known technology used in both payments and communication systems.
Source: US Congressional Research Service, Bitcoin: Questions, Answers, and Analysis of Legal Issues, January 28, 2015.
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Money is no object:
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Fragile market
Despite the vast potential of this new
technology, and its proven ability to survive
several formidable tests of its legitimacy, the
current state of the market remains fragile.
This is due in large part to the serious
threats exposed by the Liberty Reserve5 and
Silk Road money laundering schemes6, and
the more recent cybertheft that swiftly drove
the Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox into
bankruptcy.7 And these are only the first
threats to have surfaced. In the coming
years, we expect more threat-based
challenges, such as tax evasion, bribery
payments, terrorist financing, and financing
counterfeit products, may follow. There have
already been glimpses of interest from
terrorist groups discussing its uses in
chatrooms. Simply put, the technological
innovation of cryptocurrency, with its
positive attributes, has brought with it a
dark side in which its most fundamental
innovationsspeed, secure transfer and
store of value, and limited personal data
exposureare exploited by hackers and
criminals.
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5 Department of Justice, US Attorneys Office, Southern District
of New York, Manhattan US Attorney Announces Charges
Against Liberty Reserve, One Of Worlds Largest Digital
Currency Companies, And Seven Of Its Principals And
Employees For Allegedly Running A $6 Billion Money
Laundering Scheme, May 28, 2013.
6 Department of Justice, US Attorneys Office, Southern District
of New York, Manhattan US Attorney Announces Charges
Against Bitcoin Exchangers, Including CEO of Bitcoin
Exchange Company, For Scheme to Sell and Launder Over
$1 Million in Bitcoins Related To Silk Road Drug Trafficking,
January 27, 2014.
7 Recent press coverage has led to some confusion around the
collapse and bankruptcy of Mt. Gox, the Tokyo-based Bitcoin
exchange. Mt. Gox has publicly blamed so-called transaction
malleability attacks for the loss of over 850,000 bitcoins.
However, core developers, as well as the Bitcoin Foundation,
have rejected the assertion that the code is flawed and say
the flaw was in Mt. Goxs implementation.
When a transaction is submitted to the Bitcoin network, a
mathematical function is applied to the data in the transaction
to produce a cryptographic hash, a type of electronic
fingerprint for the transaction. Until it is included in a
completed block, it is possible for an attacker monitoring the
network to change certain extraneous data in a transaction
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(but, importantly, not the essential data of who is paying
how much to whom). Such an alteration produces a
completely different cryptographic hash, and it is possible
that the transaction, so altered, will be what the network
ultimately accepts. Such an attack could not alter the
sender, recipient, or amount of bitcoins sentbut if
successful, it would result in the transaction having a
different identifying hash.
Based on our research, it appears that when sending
bitcoins to withdrawing customers, Mt. Goxs accounting
systems relied exclusively on tracking the original hash of a
transaction to verify that said transaction had been properly
processed by the Bitcoin network. As a result, when
attackers successfully altered the hash of a processed
withdrawal transaction, the exchanges systems erroneously
interpreted the absence of the original hash as evidence
that the transaction had never been processed; the
exchange would therefore resend the same amount of
bitcoins a second time (and, perhaps, repeatedly if the
second transaction was itself subject to a successful attack)
to such customers. Using this tactic, the cyberthieves
drained Mt. Goxs bitcoin holdings until the issue was finally
discovered and withdrawals were suspended.
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Tech developers
Many talented technology developers have
devoted their efforts to cryptocurrency
mining, while others have focused on more
entrepreneurial pursuits such as developing
exchanges, wallet services, and alternative
cryptocurrencies. In our view, the
cryptocurrency market has only started to
attract talent with the depth, breadth, and
market focus needed to take the industry to
the next level. For the market to gain
mainstream acceptance, however,
consumers and corporations will need to see
cryptocurrency as a user-friendly solution to
their common transactions. Further, the
industry will need to develop cybersecurity
technology and protocols.
Figure 5: Potential impact of digital currency on the financial services industry and
other areas.
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86%
of respondents who
have used
cryptocurrencies in the
last year expect their
use of cryptocurrencies
to significantly increase
in the next three years.
Source: 2015 PwC
Consumer
Cryptocurrency Survey.
Investors
Financial institutions
Money is no object:
Understanding the evolving cryptocurrency market
Cryptocurrencies enable a fast, secure, lowcost opportunity for consumers to use, store,
and transmit money over the Internet.
However, what sets cryptocurrency apart
from other recent payment innovations is its
potential to dramatically limit the role of
traditional financial institutions in clearing
and settling payments.
Cryptocurrency transactions are processed
using cryptographic code verification that
clears and settles transactions within
minutes, at zero or nominal cost.
Theoretically, no traditional banking players
are necessary. Traditional clearing and
settlement services are required only at the
point of exchange for fiat currency. For this
reason, the more that cryptocurrency gains
acceptance among merchants and
consumers, the less there will be a need for
traditional financial institutions to provide
clearing and settlement services.
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Australian Taxation Office, Tax treatment of cryptocurrencies in Australia specifically bitcoin, December 18,
2014, http://www.ato.gov.au, accessed July 10, 2015.
Canada Revenue Agency, What you should know about
digital currency, December 03, 2014, http://www.craarc.gc.ca, accessed July 10, 2015.
Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore, Income Tax
Treatment of Virtual Currency, May 15, 2015,
https://www.iras.gov.sg, accessed July 10, 2015.
HM Treasury, Digital Currencies: response to the call for
information, March 2015, http://www.gov.uk, accessed
July 10, 2015.
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Emerging markets
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About us
Andrew Luca
Financial Services
[email protected]
(646) 335 4649
http://www.linkedin.com/in/drewluca
George Prokop
Forensics
[email protected]
(703) 918 1148
www.linkedin.com/pub/george-w-prokop/13/497/a36
Luke Sully
Forensics
[email protected]
(312) 298 5184
https://www.linkedin.com/in/lukesullypwc
Daniel Tannebaum
Financial Services
[email protected]
(646) 471 7159
https://www.linkedin.com/pub/daniel-tannebaum-cfe/4/486/2a6
Mindi Lowy
Tax
[email protected]
(646) 471 2312
https://www.linkedin.com/pub/mindi-lowy/2/a74/473
A publication of PwCs
Financial Services Institute
Marie Carr
Principal
Cathryn Marsh
Director
Emily Dunn
Senior Manager
Kristen Grigorescu
Senior Manager
Manoj Kashyap
Financial Services
[email protected]
(415) 498 7460
https://www.linkedin.com/pub/manoj-kashyap/95/706/690
Follow us on Twitter @PwC_US_FinSrvcs
We would like to acknowledge the contributions of Robert Musiala, Jr.
to this publication.
Money is no object: Understanding the evolving cryptocurrency market, PwC, August 2015, www.pwc.com/fsi
This publication was produced by PwCs Financial Services Institute. Visit us at www.pwc.com/fsi to learn more about us and meet the team.
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