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05-Feb-2018<br />

LLOYDS BANKING : Bank customers banned from buying Bitcoins on credit cards<br />

4-traders<br />

Click to open<br />

You likely haven’t failed to notice that Bitcoin has been hugely volatile of late, with the result<br />

that Lloyds Banking Group has now banned customers from purchasing the cryptocurrency<br />

on credit cards.<br />

It seems that Bitcoin’s meteoric rise throughout December – during which it climbed to<br />

around $19,500 (around £13,800, AU$24,500) in the middle of the month, a near fivefold<br />

increase in under three months at the tail end of last year – might be prompting plenty of<br />

people to buy the virtual coins with money they don’t have. In other words, using their credit<br />

cards to jump on the Bitcoin bandwagon.<br />

Following Bitcoin’s massive slide last month, and subsequent major volatility – it’s currently<br />

just under the $8,000 (around £5,700, AU$10,000) mark at the time of writing – Lloyds fears<br />

that folks won’t be able to pay back their debts if the cryptocurrency continues to fall in<br />

value.<br />

As the Guardian reports, a spokeswoman for the Lloyds Banking Group commented:<br />

“Across Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland, Halifax and MBNA, we do not accept credit card<br />

transactions involving the purchase of cryptocurrencies.”<br />

The digital coinage could still have a long way to drop, potentially. Particularly with signals<br />

like this being given off by major financial institutions.<br />

Worldwide worries<br />

Over in the US, major banks are making similar moves. As Bloomberg observed, over the<br />

weekend, JPMorgan, Bank of America and Citigroup blocked the purchase of Bitcoin (and<br />

other cryptocurrencies) via credit cards, simply because of the risk involved.<br />

The initial major fall in Bitcoin last month was triggered by rumors that South Korea could<br />

ban trading the cryptocurrency entirely, although the government later clarified that this<br />

wouldn’t happen – at least not in the near term. There are also whispers that China is<br />

looking towards a total ban on the virtual currency.<br />

It’s not just governments and banks who are worried, either, with on adverts for any<br />

cryptocurrency. That happened because the social network is worried about scam ads for<br />

cryptocurrencies tricking people into parting with their (real) money.<br />

As we’ve mentioned, Bitcoin is a volatile enough arena as it is, and all this extra pressure as<br />

a reaction to its inflated-looking value is likely to take its toll on confidence in the<br />

cryptocurrency.<br />

That said, there are doubtless plenty of folks out there who witnessed December’s huge<br />

rally, and are willing to punt that it might happen again. Or perhaps look at alternative or<br />

more minor players in the virtual currency world, in the belief that they may follow in<br />

Bitcoin’s blazing wake.<br />

-- We’ve picked out the best mining GPU of 2018<br />

(c) 2018 Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights<br />

reserved Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info)., source & North African papers

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