Gold vs. Bitcoin: The Store of Value Dilemma
During a prominent session at Binance Blockchain Week, a debate unfolded between Peter Schiff, a well-known gold proponent, and Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, the co-founder of Binance, highlighting the inherent challenges in verifying physical gold. The spark for the discussion was Schiff's inability to confirm the authenticity of a gold bar presented to him.
The Foundation of the Debate
The core of the debate centered on determining the superior store of value: tokenized gold or Bitcoin (BTC). Both parties relied on key criteria for assessing an asset's suitability as a currency, including divisibility, portability, verifiability, durability, and supply constraints.
Changpeng Zhao's Arguments
CZ argued that Bitcoin surpasses gold as a store of value due to any user's ability to instantly verify the cryptocurrency through a full node or other methods that check a cryptographically secure public ledger. In a surprising move, CZ presented Schiff with a gold bar, asking: "It says Kyrgyzstan, 1,000 grams, fine gold, 999.9, and a serial number. Is it real gold?"
Peter Schiff's Provocative Response
Schiff responded with a simple, "I don't know," eliciting laughter and applause from the crypto-savvy audience. Notably, CZ had previously criticized tokenized gold in October, pointing out that holders must trust the issuer, which led to this confrontation with Schiff.
The Evolving Debate Between Gold and Bitcoin Advocates
The debate between gold and Bitcoin proponents has evolved significantly over the years. Gold advocates, including Schiff, argue that gold tokenization addresses many of gold's limitations regarding portability, divisibility, and verifiability, while also making it useful for decentralized finance (DeFi) applications.
Objections from Bitcoin Advocates
Conversely, Bitcoin advocates argue that real-world asset tokenization (RWA), or representing physical items on a blockchain, does not solve the fundamental problems inherent in the physical gold underlying digital gold tokens, including centralization, counterparty risks, and expensive audit procedures.
Fire Assaying: The Gold Standard for Gold Verification
Fire assaying remains the industry benchmark for complete gold verification. According to the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), the international gold bullion trade association that sets industry standards for weight, refinement, trading, storage, and reputable custodians, there are several industry-accepted methods for assaying, or scientifically verifying, the precious metal content of gold.
These methods include X-Ray Fluorescent Spectroscopy, Ultrasound, and Eddy Current testing. However, these are costly, require expert knowledge, and are limited in scope. X-Ray Fluorescent Spectroscopy is only effective at determining gold content in metals up to 10 microns in thickness, while other methods face similar limitations, making them non-"definitive" testing methods, according to the LBMA.
The only method that provides 100% certainty is fire assaying, which involves melting the gold to verify its integrity and composition. However, the LBMA characterizes this as a "destructive" testing method.
Conclusion
The LBMA emphasizes that, "At present, there does not appear to be a definitive non-destructive testing solution that can be endorsed, and so the best risk mitigation of sub-standard assay remains the Good Delivery eco-system of refineries and chain of custody."