Robert Shiller, professor of economics at Yale University and co-founder of the Case-Shiller Index, expressed his idea about cryptocurrency.
"I'm interested in bitcoin as
a sort of bubble. It doesn't mean that it will disappear, that it'll burst forever. It may be with us for a while," said Shiller.
"To me, it's interesting as another example of
faddish human behavior. It's glamorous," he added. The bitcoin craze reminds him of
tulip mania in the 17th century, the event which is considered one of the first recorded speculative bubbles where a buying frenzy and lofty expectations replace rational justifications for an item's value.
The price of bitcoin grew so fast. The cryptocurrency hurtled above $1,000 in early 2017 after trading at less than a $1 at the beginning of the decade. It even hit an all-time high north of $20,000 in mid-December. (recommend
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A lot of people have benefited from the cryptocurrency investment. But Shiller would still like to see it as a
psychology experiment. It is more psychological than something that could be explained by the computer science department, He said.
Bitcoin held above $8,000 on Friday morning after topping that level a day earlier. The two-day rally comes after a weak start to April likely tied to
tax-related selling. Prices dipped below $7,000 earlier this month.
Will the bitcoin disappear? What's the true value of bitcoin? What essence in bitcoin are we paying for?

These are very wise words said by professor and are in line with my definition of bitcoin. Yes, people are making lot of money from it and it is indeed a psychology experiment. But coming back to conventional trading, people often do pump and dump over there too in form of inside trading. There have been so many frauds linked to insider trading that government had to run a crackdown on those. We all should give more time to this market to become more stable and then we can re evaluate whether it is still a psychology experiment or not.