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El Salvador’s bitcoin adoption hit by an easy money-making loophole

El Salvador recently became the first country in the world to make bitcoin legal tender, but traders have been exploiting the state issued bitcoin "wallet app" to make a quick profit
stickers used as part of a campaign against the use of Bitcoin as legal tender
There have been protests against bitcoin in El Salvador
REUTERS/Jose Cabezas via Alamy

El Salvador’s move to become the first country in the world to make bitcoin legal tender on 9 June has been met with protests and bedevilled by fraud, market volatility and technical glitches. Now the Central American nation has had to suspend a key function in Chivo Wallet, its government-issued smartphone app used to store and exchange bitcoin, because economic traders were exploiting it to make a profit.

El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, has bitcoin as a way to save Salvadorans an estimated $400 million a year lost in remittance fees, to bring banking to the 70 per cent of the population that lacks access and to boost the nation’s economy.

However, because bitcoin is a nascent currency, its value swings wildly, 17 per cent on 7 September when Chivo Wallet launched.

To encourage bitcoin exchanges, Chivo Wallet allowed users to freeze prices for 1 minute when previewing them. It was intended to stabilise transactions and ensure that, for example, a customer knew how much they were paying for a meal in a restaurant and that the restaurant knew how much they were receiving for it.

But traders have been exploiting the function by comparing the wallet’s frozen price against bitcoin’s real time market value when exchanging it for US dollars. If the market price of bitcoin rises during the 60 seconds after the freeze, they buy the cryptocurrency at the wallet’s lower frozen price. If the price falls, they sell it.

This practice, which is legal, is known as scalping. Chivo Wallet announced that it was the value-freezing function and all visibility of pricing on 18 October because it claimed people were using it to commit “fraud” to make “endless” profit.

While other cryptocurrency exchanges cover losses from scalping with their commission fees, in El Salvador it is taxpayers who foot the bill with a

The issue further erodes confidence in Bukele’s vision of the country becoming a crypto-state, and critics say it shows the naivety of trying to regulate an anarchic currency designed to be decentralised.

“Everyone is blinded now, they have no idea what price they’re buying bitcoin at,” says Oscar Salguero, a crypto enthusiast from El Salvador who says Chivo Wallet was rushed out before it was ready for commercial use. “And people were already losing trust in the application!”

Bukele, though, is still touting the benefits of the cryptocurrency. He has announced that profits from a recent surge in bitcoin’s value will be used to build a veterinary hospital called “Chivo Pets”, and the world’s first volcano-powered bitcoin mine – a bank of powerful computers run on geothermal electricity – started production on 1 October.

“Chivo” is slang for cool, but the reaction from Salvadorans, distrust bitcoin and oppose businesses being forced to accept it, has been anything but. Many have taken to Twitter to complain and some have protested on the streets. On 15 September, a Chivo ATM was

In July, many Salvadorans found that the $30 in bitcoin they were promised for opening a Chivo Wallet had already been claimed And when bitcoin became legal tender on 7 September, Chivo Wallet was taken offline for hours as the servers crashed. When Bukele isn’t using Twitter to champion his bitcoin plan, he is often offering tech support.

As well as bitcoin’s volatility making it unsuitable for use as a national currency, a lack of internet coverage and trust in government in El Salvador means that it is doomed to fail, says David Gerard, author of Attack of the 50 Foot Blockchain. And it is unlikely to be faring as well as Bukele claims, adds Gerard. Bukele used Twitter on 30 September to state that there were .

Neither the Salvadoran presidency nor Chivo Wallet responded to a èƵ request for information on how they will address the latest technical issue.

El Salvador’s bitcoin gamble is being watched closely across the world. Panama introduced a bill this month that could lead to bitcoin becoming legal tender there, and there are reports that the Polynesian kingdom of Tonga could follow suit.

Topics: cryptocurrency