Bitcoin is not used as a Store of Value in Venezuela, but as Bridge Currency: Research

A research by Matt Alhborg, a data-scientist and researcher at dlab.vc during a black-out in Venezuela reveals how Venezuela dominates the crypto scene is South America. It also suggests that Bitcoin is primarily used as a ‘bridge currency’ between US Dollar and the local currencies.
The electricity black-out occurred on 7th March with which economic activity across the country came to a halt for several days. In the midst of this incident, Alhborg observes a drastic drop in the Bitcoin and crypto trading volume in Venezuela which is quite obvious.
However, it is also seen that along with Venezuela, the drop was startlingly equivalent in other Latin American countries as well. It reciprocates with Argentinian, Chilean, and Mexican peso along with the Peruvian sol. It shows the dominance of Venezuela in the continent when it comes to cryptocurrency trading.
Hence, he notes that Bitcoin is acting as a vehicle currency across South America.
Dollarizing Latin America
Most Latin currencies, especially Argentinian Peso and the Venezuelan Bolivar, suffer from hyperinflation. Hence, $10 worth income today could become equivalent to $5 in a month’s, over even a weeks time. Hence, holding savings in Bolivar is impractical.
While one might think that Bitcoin is the choice for Store of Value (SoV), it is actually the US dollar, Chinese Yuan and other stable FIAT currencies in high demand.
Nic Carter, the founder of Coinmetrics tweeted,
Venezuela isn’t ‘Bitcoinizing’. It’s ok to admit that. Bitcoin is mostly a wholesale network used by sophisticated brokers to facilitate the flow of foreign currency into the country, with dollars being highly demanded.
It’s dollarizing via Bitcoin.
The foreign exchange rate in these countries are tremendously high for feasible operations of money transmitter businesses. Hence, the locals have to resort to informal sites like localbitcoin.com to convert from Bitcoin to Bolivar and vice-versa.
This is again used to exchange to other currencies across the continent. It has helped in the seamless remittance from other Latin American countries and developed countries by the Venezuelan workers.
Furthermore, he also notes that with progressive economic changes in the country, the volume of Bitcoin trading is decreasing. Alhborg notes,
In concert with this change in circumstances on the ground in Venezuela, there has also been a gradual reduction in Bitcoin-bolivar trading on LocalBitcoins.
When do you think Bitcoin will start acting as a real Store of Value (SoV) across the world? Please share your views with us.
- Japanese Gaming Firm Gumi to Boost Treasury With BTC, XRP After $38M Raise
- BNB Leads Crypto Market Rally With Fresh All-Time High, Expert Sees $5000 Upside
- Billionaire Ray Dalio Calls Bitcoin “Alternative Money” as BTC Profit-Taking Tops $3.7B Amid $120K Rally
- Canary Litecoin ETF Delayed Due to Government Shutdown, What’s Next?
- VanEck Registers Lido Staked Ethereum Trust in Delaware, LDO Up 7%
- Pi Network Price at Risk of Another Crash as Mysterious Whale Stops Buying
- Solana Price Eyes $360 After Bullish Retest As VisionSys AI Deploys $2B Treasury Strategy
- Cardano Price Forecast As Hashdex Listing Fuels Optimism For $1.27 Breakout
- BONK Price Rally Ahead? Open Interest Jumps as TD Buy Signal Flashes
- Shiba Inu Price to Surge as Whales Buy and Team Commits to Shibarium Growth
- XRP Price Prediction After Ripple CTO David Schwartz Resigns