Securing Tomorrow Today: Why Bitcoin Is the Ultimate Store of Value for Businesses

While there is a lot of information circulating on how businesses can add bitcoin to their corporate treasury, or to integrate Bitcoin payments into their business operations, it’s worth having a conversation on WHY this is even a good idea in the first place.


So, what is the why?


Bitcoin is money. In fact, Bitcoin is the best money we have discovered. This, then raises the question ‘’what's wrong with the current money’’? If it ain't broke, why fix it? Right?

Let’s look at how money works in the business process.


As a business owner, you know that you first have to have a product or service, that somebody else feels will add value to them, before they take out their money and pay you for it.


This is otherwise known as selling.


Once you have been paid, you in return pay off your own production costs and your own living costs and whatever is left is your retained earnings. Retained earnings can be either reinvested or saved.
Savings is what you put away as a safety net against unforeseen problems in the future or new opportunities that may arise, and you need money ready in both scenarios.

Money is not the end goal itself.

It is stored time & energy to be used at some point in the future for something that you need.
To put this process in the simplest possible terms; Build + Sell = Money

In the current world of highly financialized services this unfortunately is not how money works.
When you go to the bank to lend money for a new project the bank is not lending out depositor’s savings that they are holding. They used to do it this way when banks were required to have full reserve banking. Full reserve banking meant that for every R100 a bank lent out they had to first have R100 of a depositor’s money. A one-to-one loan. Over the years this has changed to fractional reserve, and in some cases even zero reserve banking. This means the bank does not actually have the money before the loan is granted, it is created when the loan is issued.
You take this money, you invest it, you create value, and you sell that value for money. One of the production expenses you pay back is the loan. When the loan is paid off that debt is cancelled and the money ceases to exist. Deleted.
Back to simple possible terms; Money + Build = Sell

Contrasting these two processes brings us to the crux of the matter.
In the first process, the work has to be done first (excuse the pun) and money is the result of the value created when the sale takes place and they buyer choses to part with his own savings in return for that value.
In the second process the money is created BEFORE there is value added. Now you have some products to sell, and sell them you better. The perverse outcome of this system is twofold;

  1. You have made products that you may not have a market for, because you got the money first.
    This is why stupid things get made and we are bombarded by an ever increasing amount of advertising and selling techniques to buy stuff we don’t need or want.
  2. Money has now entered the market before any value has been created.
    This is otherwise known as inflation.

Of the two, Inflation is the real killer.

When banks (both retail banks and central banks) create money through loans which is injected into the economy, but no value has yet been added, the money in the system the money no longer represents the value in the system through the amount of goods and services produced. The extra money in the system chasing the same number of goods and services over time starts to drive those prices up.
This is the fundamental problem with the money printer when people can access money before they add value, they start to make strange investments decisions.

Zombie companies that would otherwise fail are propped up on cheap loans. Dumb investments are made because money can be obtained at unrealistically low interest rates (low risk on money created at the click of the ‘’loan approved’’ button) and something must be done with it. This money has not been earned through real production.


Bitcoin is money that cannot be created from nothing. It is expensive to produce through its mining process. There are energy costs, site location costs, staffing costs, and other real-world inputs that go into Bitcoin mining, which ties Bitcoin into real world physics.


The Bitcoin fundamentals of scarcity, verifiable, secure, transparent and censorship resistant have not changed since inception, and offers certainty in an ever-uncertain world.
Compare this to the money sitting in your bank account. These are not even the same thing and for them both to be called money is laughable.


The only ways to get bitcoin is to mine it, buy it or get paid in it.
Buying bitcoin is to buy some at the current market price. This price is set by thousands of participants in free market dynamics all over the world. It is true price discovery. This makes Bitcoin as different as could possibly be to the current money system.


The best way to get bitcoin is to get your customers to pay you in bitcoin for your goods and services. Setting this up is as simple as downloading an app on your phone and can easily be expanded into existing Point of Sale systems in more complex configurations.


In closing, think about the money you use for daily transactional purposes, and separate that from the money you use for long term savings to secure your future. Saving in money that inflates away is like holding a melting ice cube in your hand.


Choose where to store your savings, its your future.

The Paradox of Money

A paradox is a statement that is self-contradictory or logically untenable, though based on a valid deduction from acceptable premises.

The world of money can be confusing, and two recent discussions got me thinking about how little people understand how money works.

But before that, let’s warm up with a mental exercise: You know Zeno's Dichotomy Paradox? In the fifth century B.C.E., Zeno offered arguments that led to conclusions contradicting what we all know from our physical experience. The Dichotomy Paradox is the one where a person can never actually reach their destination because they must cover half the distance, and then half of that distance, and so on ad infinitum. In other words, they never actually arrive at their destination although they are always getting closer. Now while you can follow this logic and it makes sense, at the same time you know that if you wanted to cross from one side of the street to another, you simply walk across and you have no trouble with half distance’s ad infinitum. And this is the paradox.

Similarly, when it comes to understanding money, our initial assumptions can often be misleading.

Now, back to the two discussions. Firstly, the Trump coin frenzy.

This coin was launched the day before the inauguration of President Trump. The coin's value skyrocketed overnight, only to crash down 40%. A friend asked this question: where does the money come from to pay out people who sell the coin at a higher price? For example, if someone buys the coin for $1000 and sells it for $10,000, where does the extra $9000 come from? This question seems reasonable at first glance, but it reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of how markets work.

The answer lies in understanding how open & free market dynamics work. When more people are buying than selling, the price goes up. When more people are selling than buying the price goes down. For you to buy the coin, you're buying it from someone who's looking to sell it to you at that price. If the price is not agreeable to both of you the sale does not take place.

This is the ‘value for value’ exchange that takes place during every transaction. Neither party is forced to trade with the other. And neither will any trade take place if one party does not value what they receive in the trade. For the trade to succeed both parties need to feel they will be better off after the trade than before the trade. If you later sell it for a higher price, you're finding a buyer who's willing to pay that price. If the price starts to go down, then more people are selling and flooding the market with the coin. If the coins are not selling, then the price will continue to drop until a buyer is found. If no buyer is found at any price then you are stuck with the coin.

So back to the Trump coin and the mystery of the extra $9000 - there's no central pot of money or vault; it's just an open marketplace of buyers and sellers trading with each other.

The second discussion was about interest payments on loans in world with fixed money supply. The question was: In a world with a fixed money supply (unlike what we have at the moment – but that’s for another day), where would the money come from to pay the interest on loans? The assumption here is that you borrow $500,000 to buy a home, and over a period of time you pay back $600,000. Now $100,000 has been created and where does that money come from?

Let’s answer this question by another example.

You go to buy a new car and the car you want is priced at $50,000. This price is made up of the all the costs taken to get the car into your hands, such as raw materials, manufacturing costs, labour costs, transportation costs, branding and marketing costs, rent, and the profit the dealership wants to make on the sale. Now if you don’t think the car is worth $50,000 you will choose a cheaper car at a price you are happy with, but the dealership still makes a profit on the sale of the cheaper car.

In the case of the interest paid on a loan, the interest is the PROFIT the lender makes on the loan. In fact if you look at the breakdown of the $500,000 loan you will see that admin fees, management fees and interest listed to make up the final real price of $600,000.

Just like the profit the car dealership makes on the sale of the car. This profit is what the lender feels is a good reflection of the risk undertaken in providing the loan. Therefore interest, like profit, does not create money out of thin air. It is a real cost that is part of the final sale price paid by the buyer.

While this is not a strictly business article it does involve money, and money is half of every transaction, and business is about successful transactions.

Bitcoin and the Tariff Wars

The New Testament Bible talks about building your house on a foundation of rock and warns of the dangers of building your house on the sand which is a poor foundation.

Your home is the place where you have chosen to stake your claim in this life. It's the place where you are going to build a place of safety and raise a family. It's the place you come home to at the end of a busy day to rest, and it's the place where you and your spouse talk about your dreams for the future and make your plans.

Similarly, a business needs solid foundation, but this stability is not created about the physical location you choose to operate your business from. It is the political, social, and economic environments you choose to place your business. Some regions are better than others, and some countries are better than others.

However, it does not matter how great things are right now, circumstances can change quite quickly. The recent global shutdown caused by COVID are still fresh in everyone's mind. Political changes, through elections or revolution, are famous for making sweeping changes to the laws and regulations of the previous regime. Right now, the phrase “tariff war” is on everybody's minds. Stock markets have reacted strongly to the Trump proposed tariff and countries are responding with tariffs of their own. Nothing rattles international global trade quite like a tariff war, or at least threats of one. All of this creates uncertainty.

Uncertainty makes planning extremely difficult. But businesses need to plan. They need to figure out supply chains, distribution channels, new product lines, branding and marketing to introduce these new product lines, and of course the regulatory environment into which these products fit.

Even with stable political conditions, legislation can change. Suddenly with the swift stroke of a pen, your bestselling product could be in trouble.

We haven't even added currency fluctuations into this discussion. Sometimes it's a country on the other side of the world that has a problem which reverberates all the way through to affect your business.

One common thread about uncertainty is that is generally completely outside of your control.

So where does Bitcoin fit into this? Bitcoin’s is a simple idea perfectly executed and runs entirely unsupervised and uncorrupted since its inception in 2009. Bitcoin has a simple supply issue schedule of a new block every ten minutes and this supply halves every four years. That’s it. And it has done this without interruption since 2009. It is so predictable the reliable that it is often described by the phrase “tik tok, next block”.

I think it is worth emphasizing the fact that this is Bitcoin just following its code; no more, no less.

It is not affected by a politician calling for a tariff war.

It is not affected by the sudden devaluation of a currency or the hyperinflation of said currency.

It is not affected by COVID lockdowns.

It is not affected by a supply chain shock anywhere in the world.

In fact, there is nothing that can be done to shut Bitcoin down or to alter it in any way without expending such significant resources as to make that likelihood nigh impossible. Even people heavily involved in the Bitcoin community that have, in the past, called for changes to the Bitcoin protocol, insisting that there is a dire emergency or cataclysmic event about to happen that required an urgent change, and have not succeeded. Bitcoin continues uninterrupted, unconcerned, and unchanged.

This is the rock foundation for your business that is called bitcoin.

If your business accepts Bitcoin for payments of goods and services, you have started building your solid foundation. This foundation will get stronger, and as your business accumulates more and more Bitcoin, you know that you are accumulating an asset that is not swayed by public opinion, political bias, newfangled fashionable ideas, currency debasement or the need humans have to change everything constantly, all the time to try and make it better.

It is for this very reason that bitcoin exists.

Tik tok, next block.

What is a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve?

What is a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve? I'm so glad you asked. This is just a fancy way of saying you have some savings in Bitcoin. In the case of an individual person this would be the same as a savings account, except in bitcoin. In the case of a company this sort of savings would be called a treasury. Company treasuries don't come up in conversation too often simply because most companies can’t leave cash just lying around in case of an emergency. Inflation eats away dormant cash like a melting ice cube. Reference previous article for more details. The profit predicament.

As more and more businesses start to look at a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve (BSR) it’s worth discussing some ideas around this. There are a few ways for this to be done:

Firstly, the SBR is a reserve. It’s not working capital, and it’s not short term investing. It’s capital that can be stored for at least 5 years without disrupting company liquidity.

Now how do you actually go about creating one? Let’s look at two options.

1. Buy Bitcoin with retained earnings and store it, or

2. Get paid in Bitcoin and store that as your strategic reserve.

Option One:

This option involves the company opening an account with a registered Bitcoin exchange. Be prepared for some serious admin jumping through all the KYC hoops – exchanges are financial service providers after all. Deposits funds to the exchange account, and then buy Bitcoin. The exchange typically charges between 1% and 2% per transaction, but make sure to check the ‘fees’ page on your chosen exchange. Fees are different for each type of transaction. An eft payment from your company bank account to your exchange account is the cheapest but you do have to wait the usual 2-3 days for the fund to clear. You can use quicker payment options but fees tend to be higher for the convenience.

Option Two:

A much more interesting option is getting your clients to pay you in bitcoin. This way you can get bitcoin without having to open an exchange account and go through the troublesome KYC process with multiple verifications and emails forwards and backwards. You also avoid the exchange transaction fees but, more importantly, you also avoid the merchant fees for credit card transactions.

Merchant accounts for businesses charge between 2.2% and 3.5% per transaction this means for every R100 your client pays by credit card you pay R2.20 – R3.50 to the bank for the favour. Of course, there is also an initiation fee the bank charges for the hardware and setting this up and there can be a monthly admin fee that you are required to pay to continue the service. There is an increasing number of third-party companies providing the similar solutions but the fees are pretty much similar to traditional banks.

https://www.news24.com/news24/bi-archive/card-online-payments-south-africa-2021-6

Something else to think about with credit card payments is that you don't actually receive the money immediately. Yes, the transaction shows as approved when the credit card is swiped and your customer takes his product or service, but the funds only arrive in your account days later. This means that not only do you pay a transaction fee but you're also going to spend up to a week waiting for your money.

For the sake of simple math let's use 5% as the cost of taking money you have earned from your business to purchase Bitcoin (3% merchant fees and 2% exchange fees). Now imagine if your client paid you in Bitcoin. This means you now get the Bitcoin at a 5% discount and the Bitcoin is stored directly to your account.

Business owners sometimes say that they cannot afford to lose out on rands and that they need every penny to meet their expenses. The reality is you are not going to be converting all your sales from rands to bitcoin overnight. You will only have a very low percentage of people using Bitcoin to buy your products and services, at least for the moment. Pick ‘n Pay stores have been early bitcoin payment adopters and even with their national footprint of groceries (cheap daily necessities) they only received 0.34% of their annual turnover in bitcoin.

https://www.itweb.co.za/article/pick-n-pay-sees-uptick-in-bitcoin-payments-in-stores/DZQ58vV8kL1MzXy2

https://www.picknpayinvestor.co.za/pdf/investor-centre/results-and-presentations/2024/interim-results-2024/pnp-h1-fy25-interim-results-booklet-singles.pdf

The fees that you are paying on credit card transactions are going to amount to far more than what you would miss by being paid in bitcoin with a near zero transaction fee. This is also a convenient savings tool as the bitcoin that comes in gets stored and left there. It's a small percentage you probably won't even really notice it and yet it's just going to add up week by week, month by month until you have a really significant portion. Think of this as a forced savings account.

You can even afford to incentivise clients to pay in bitcoin by offering a discount.

Another benefit is that by offering or by accepting bitcoin payments can sell to customers outside of South Africa, that would normally have difficulties sending you cross border payments via traditional means.

Speak to us for more information.