Where
Wall Street was once a united front in running the financials of
America, and to an extent, the rest of the world, it is suffering a
polarization as Bitcoin disrupts opinions.
As the digital currency keeps booming, investors, financial
managers and major banking CEOs are finding themselves in different
camps for different reasons.
Those for it
The most recent championing move for Bitcoin has come from Goldman Sachs, a company that has slowly come around to the digital currency, as they are exploring a new trading platform that would be centered on trading Bitcoin and Ethereum.
This platform, which will be run by Chief Executive Lloyd
Blankfein, comes just weeks after JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon spewed
vitriol about Bitcoin.
However, JP Morgan is seemingly a little bi-polar for as
their CEO threatens his employees if they are caught involved in
Bitcoin, the same company had also been experimenting with the some of
the infrastructure that underpins digital currencies - Blockchains.
Fidelity Investments have also taken a bold step for Wall Street as CEO Abigail Johnson, made cryptocurrency balances visible on the investment manager’s website for customers that hold an account with Coinbase.
Morgan Stanley seems to be on the side of Bitcoin as CEO
James Gorman, said he saw Bitcoin as “certainly something more than just
a fad.”
Those against it
Jamie Dimon declared Bitcoin “a fraud” that would “eventually blow up.” the JP Morgan CEO and his thoughts on Bitcoin coincided with a ban of ICO’s in China and is said to be one of the catalyzing factors in the recent drop in price.
“It’s worse than tulip bulbs and won’t end well,” Dimon said, referring to the classic, 17th-century asset bubble.