5 Reasons I Won't Invest in Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, or Ripple

Cryptocurrencies simply couldn't be stopped in 2017. Having begun the year with a market cap of $17.7 billion, virtual currencies ended the year having gained almost $600 billion in market cap, or more than 3,300%. It's very likely the single-best year we've ever seen (and may ever see) for any asset class.

This year has been markedly different. After hitting an all-time market cap high of $835 billion on Jan. 7, cryptocurrencies briefly dipped below $250 billion in early April, according to CoinMarketCap.com. The faces of the virtual currency rally -- bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Ripple -- have completely stalled.

A businessman looking at an encrypted blockchain on a large digital screen.
A businessman looking at an encrypted blockchain on a large digital screen.

Image source: Getty Images.

Crypto's most prominent tokens rally behind the potential for blockchain

Some crypto advocates would suggest that an across-the-board drop of 60% to 90% in the well-known virtual currencies mentioned above is the perfect buying opportunity, and there are certainly reasons to believe these premier virtual currencies could bounce back.

Front and center among the many catalysts that could drive brand-name virtual currencies higher is the emergence of blockchain technology. For those of you unfamiliar with blockchain, we're talking about the digital, distributed, and decentralized ledger responsible for logging all transactions without the need for a financial intermediary, like a bank. In other words, it's an entirely new way of transmitting "funds" (which are often in virtual tokens) from one party to another without the need to use traditional banking channels. It's also a way of transparently and immutably (i.e., in an unchanging manner) recording data.

Blockchain itself evolved from the idea that the current banking system was inadequate. In particular, there's the perception that banks are taking too big of a fee by acting as an intermediary, and that banks are taking too long when it comes to validating and settling transactions, especially in the cross-border setting, which can take up to five business days. Blockchain resolves this by settling transactions considerably faster (sometimes in real-time), as well as by circumventing banks altogether, which may lower transaction fees.

It's worth pointing out that blockchain has plenty of applications in the non-currency setting, too. It can be used to manage supply chains, create digital IDs, maintain loyalty points programs for retailers, and so much more.

Another major catalyst for bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Ripple has been the lack of institutional investor participation. With retail investors leading the charge, and access to short-selling -- i.e., betting on a downside move in an equity -- limited, the natural course of action for investors has been to buy.