Interview: BitGold co-founder Roy Sebag explains company’s philosophy

BitGold co-founder Roy Sebag.BitGold co-founder Roy Sebag.

BitGold (TSXV: XAU), which offers a platform for savings and payments in gold, listed on the TSX Venture Exchange on May 13 at 90¢ per share, and since then the shares have traded as high as $8 apiece. The start-up shook up the markets again on May 20, with the announcement that it is acquiring GoldMoney Network Ltd. (GoldMoney) for $51 million.

Roy Sebag, BitGold’s co-founder, president and CEO, recently spoke with The Northern Miner about the company’s origins and philosophy.

The 29-year-old started his career as a distressed-equity investor and developed a strategy of contrarian investing in “sticky situations” such as bankruptcies, spinoffs, and reorganizations, when he thought there was a discrepancy between market value and fundamentals. He was the classic value investor, he says, “trying to buy a dollar for 10¢” and “trying to buy equities that trade like options in terms of risk/reward — where you lose one dollar if you’re wrong, but you make $20 if you’re right.”

Sebag started investing when he was 15 years old and launched his first fund at the age of 18. “I’ve been working for a long time,” he jokes in an interview. “That’s why I have a lot of grey hair.”

Sebag and co-founder Josh Crumb set up BitGold on Aug. 14, 2014. The men have created an Internet-based financial services platform that allows users to buy gold, store gold, and pay for goods and services using gold as the currency.

Before launching BitGold, Sebag founded Braavos Capital, an international private investment organization engaged in value-oriented investments across a variety of asset classes and industry. One of its investments, Natural Resource Holdings, has acquired six historically delineated deposits in North America, which host 43-101 compliant and historic resources of 1.59 million oz. gold, 34.5 million oz. silver and 280 million tonnes iron ore. Another investment, in April 2012, was in Argentine energy company YPF, after President Christina Fernandez de Kirchner renationalized a 51% stake in the company, which at the time was majority owned by Spain’s Repsol.

In 2004, Sebag founded Essentia Equity Ltd. Among its investments was providing seed financing to PPDai, China’s first peer-lending network. PPDai went on to become a market leader by creating a credit database of borrowers and setting monthly records for loans matched. China’s Alibaba Group invested $35 million in PPDai in November 2013.

 

The Northern Miner: How has your view of gold changed over the course of your career?

Roy Sebag: I was trained to dislike gold and to look at it as something that can’t be modelled. 

But what got me to appreciate gold was understanding that markets aren’t efficient over the short-term, and at times there can be discrepancies between the fundamentals of an economy or a business, and the markets’ speculative fervor, if you will. 

It happens on the upside with hype, and it happens on the downside, and both are a result of human psychology. We move from elation to despondency because we respond to fear and greed. That’s what is so great about markets. 

And as central banks become more involved in markets, our economy has become more a reflection of the human fear and greed element. Right now we’re seeing a lot of greed. But as we saw in 2008, greed can quickly turn into fear. 

What all of this creates is a situation in which there is little predictability. Real economic growth should be driven by gains in productivity, demographics and what our physical world can sustain. Growth and prosperity have been achieved because those with capital could deploy it with some predictability — cooperating to achieve a goal. 

In today’s markets — where the central actors are a group of academics in a room in New York — it’s only about forward bets on policy. Savings and productivity have been minimized in the new “capital” return equation, and hence both metrics have been in decline since money went purely experimental.

It’s gone so far now, that at this stage of the cycle, you’re betting there will be another buyer for that negative yielding bond — because you’re not buying it on the fundamental math that it will destroy capital into maturity. Savers and those looking for long-term growth — through sustainable and cooperative gains in productivity — need a benchmark like gold, where the math has been unequivocal that it protects and measures capital and purchasing power over time.  

TNM: When did your view of gold really shift?

RS: In 2008 I started thinking that if you look at the physics of gold and the cost of mining gold, there is virtually no profit once you take into account exploration, energy and capex costs.

Therefore gold’s marginal cost is reflected over time, a global function of labour and energy. That is incredibly useful. 

And with gold you only need to produce it once, and you can keep using it over and over again with little cost to maintain — it’s the original “scalable” technology. It’s predictable in a world that is not predictable. 

By contrast, you can’t model out a security like that, with unpredictable interest rates from new academic theory. Most companies or currencies that were around 100 years ago are not around today. Gold is different, commodities are different.

With this framework, I realized that gold wasn’t an investment, it was a currency for savings and a global economic measurement. For those not born in the West, it probably has always been superior to the currency in their native countries, just hard to obtain.

If you were born anywhere other than in North America, in other words, it is clear that gold has been a superior currency, and that people are punished simply for being born elsewhere.

Factory workers born in Mississauga and factory workers born in Russia, for example, both work hard, they both contribute to society, but one is measuring his surplus in Canadian dollars and the other is doing the same in Russian rubles. Thirty years later, the person earning rubles is wiped out — for no fault of his own — and the person in Canada is fine.

So the real value in gold is not holding it as an investment, it is using it as money, as a benchmark, and for savings.

TNM: You met your co-founder, Josh Crumb, in 2011. How has your thinking evolved as a team?

RS: We were both young guys pondering existential questions, and we decided to explore whether there was a legal challenge preventing us from building something like BitGold.

We believed that the legal challenge would be the main impediment. I knew the math was clear from my background in finance, Josh developed the marginal cost model and knew the math was clear from his background in physics and mineral economics, so why can’t a modern bank be backed by gold?

And post-2008, I thought that it would be a massive selling point.

So we hired a top law firm and went to work. We discovered that there was a legal framework through which we could operate as a Canadian company, and it revolved around bailment law.

Given that gold is a commodity, you could have a customer relationship in which y
ou temporarily possess the commodity, but act on behalf of the customer.

Think of it like a valet service. You give a valet your car, the valet gives you a ticket and that’s the legal framework. It’s your property right.

So in BitGold’s case, users with an account can show up at the vault where their gold is stored and reclaim it.

TNM: What was the biggest challenge?

RS: It turns out that it wasn’t the legal but the technology. No one has tried to do this before without a shortcut, using IOUs, fractional reserves or some other way to cheat the challenges of a high-velocity physical settlement.

When you look at fiat and gold, the two were equal in 1971.

When gold was demonetized, however, you had this exponential increase in technology with advancements in the movement and digitization of fiat, with things like e-payments and credit cards. 

But gold remained in this London fix, over-the-counter trading. Transactions were cumbersome and time-consuming. You filed a request, the money was wired and the gold was shipped. The whole process could take from one to three weeks.

BitGold has shortened the settlement cycle for gold. In order to do it, we had to adapt the existing system.

When you swipe your debit card, or write a cheque, for example, the settlement cycle is generally one to two days. Often it’s as little as a few hours.

So when we wanted to store a customer’s physical gold in a vault, we had to have the system integrated with credit cards, for example. We needed to liquefy that gold into cash within a few hours, or a day.

TNM: What does it cost to open an account with BitGold?

RS: We provide gold to our users at the spot price, plus 1%, which is our fee.

TNM: Is there any risk to BitGold in this system?

RS: We try to minimize the risk for everyone. We have little working capital requirements. We just collect a fee in gold weight between purchases, sales and connections to existing payment networks.

We had to connect our technology (AURUM) to existing rails, card networks, Interac, UnionPay and Swift. We’re now connected to all of them. Users can open accounts and make deposits, and within 10 to 15 minutes, get gold at the best possible price. They can then go and use that gold. They can send it to anyone in the world for free through an email or text message. Merchants can send invoices and be paid in gold.

TNM: This will be incredibly useful for people who live in countries where banking and payment systems are not well developed.

RS: It is empowering for people who may not have a way to make deposits where they reside. The gold sits in vaults outside their jurisdiction. They can have their savings in gold, accumulate it in London, for instance, and yet access it and spend it locally from a smart phone. And the next time their country’s currency is devalued, their labour won’t be devalued. It also helps their local community and maintains aggregate demand. It counters this brain drain problem, where people constantly have to move closer to the money centers to succeed.

TNM: How did the emergence of bitcoin shape your thinking?

RS: Bitcoin showed us what was possible. We liked some of the underlying technology of bitcoin, and how bitcoin was designed to mimic gold as commodity money with a low marginal transaction cost.

What we didn’t like was its token value, because it is not a store of value inextricably linked to natural systems, it is just a really good medium of exchange for certain transactions.

It was a powerful experiment and it showed us that we could come up with a better solution, using commodity money rather than the centrally planned debt people are forced to use.

TNM: BitGold launched on May 4, listed on the TSX Venture Exchange on May 13 and at last count has signed up over 25,000 users. 

RS: We’re seeing a lot of demand — far more than I ever imagined. We now have users from almost every country.

TNM: BitGold is not available to people living in countries where there are sanctions. But why does it disallow users from the U.S.?

RS: There’s no law that precludes us from doing this in the U.S. We just want to see more federal clarity around a business like this. We don’t like the state-by-state approach. So long as we manage our Know Your Client and Anti-Money Laundering policies within guidelines approved by the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (Fintrac), and as long as we promote tax compliance, there’s no reason why banks, processors and regulators wouldn’t accept this. We just want to grow into the U.S. over time.

TNM: How is BitGold monitored or regulated?

RS: We are registered with Fintrac. We are fully regulated and have a bank-grade, anti-money laundering policy. Users have to open an account with government-issued ID. It’s an onerous process compared to a lot of Internet companies, or even PayPal, for that matter. We’re expecting a lot from our users, and we try to provide a lot in return.

TNM: What sort of costs are you carrying?

RS: We have low fixed costs. We employ 20 people, and most of them are software engineers. We also have a lot of capital.

TNM: You’ve launched a program called “Golden Heart” that rewards current users who attract new accounts. Can you explain it?

RS: We really wanted this to go viral, so we started the Golden Heart program. It gives account holders a unique link that they can text message or email to other people. If someone signs up because of it, the account holder who sent the link receives 0.25 gram gold into his or her account. 

This has changed everything. When we first launched the program we had a few users, but now people all over the world are signing up. For us it’s a low customer-acquisition cost. We don’t have a problem paying to acquire users at that price, because users are going to be gaining trust in us. One of the reasons we went public is to show that we are transparent and have best practices. We’re audited by PriceWaterhouse Coopers.

TNM: The BitGold philosophy is different from that of Gold Bugs. How would you differentiate the two?

RS: We don’t like the fear ideology or narrative that the gold bugs have linked to gold. We think there is a compellingly different and more empowering narrative simply focusing on the math, physics and personal choices people can make with technology at a grassroots level. 

We don’t believe there’s a grand conspiracy, for example, or some kind of a plan, to systematically devalue the currency or confiscate wealth. We don’t believe the Central Bank is the Knights Templar. 

We wouldn’t want a centralized gold standard, so we need to invent a market solution with technology, and do so legally and safely. We believe there is a misunderstanding of gold and money, and it has to do with the lack of a multidisciplinarian narrative by economists.

The debates in macroeconomics have never been solved — we’re always e
xperimenting and adjusting, as is the market. There’s now this common consensus in academia that if things go badly, governments can run deficits and print money, and it will encourage people to spend money that is worth less on things they don’t need,  which keeps the economy growing. 

In our opinion, they don’t properly look at the ramifications of that in a capitalist system with natural resource limits where productivity and prosperity are not easily achieved without long-term investment, literally feeding a division of labour, with commodities you can’t cheat.

So look at some of the data points related to the explosion of fiat money. Consider wealth inequality. When you measure the wealth of the 1% since 1971, you can see that it has gained by a factor of 10.

But no one understands why.

It’s clear to us that this trend is linked to the proliferation of un-anchored fiat money. When fiat money is created, it’s created through asset inflation.

TNM: Can you elaborate on the relationship between printing money, the devaluation of currencies, the increasing wealth of the 1% and why BitGold is so important as a result?

RS: Central banks don’t just distribute fiat money to everyone. They buy assets. But they don’t buy real assets such as mines, factories and property. They buy securities such as treasury bills or government-issued bonds. They buy these securities indirectly from financial service dealers, and this drives up financial asset prices.

This has been happening since the end of the Volcker era.

Who owns the securities? Not those who are just starting out on their journey in life and launching their careers. They are not the ones buying securities. They are trying to save their first $5,000 or $10,000 in a chequing account.

Who is buying the securities? It’s the 1% — which includes me.

Here’s the chronology of who benefits first in the fiat system. The 1% buys the equities and pushes up the asset prices. They then sell the securities and go out and buy assets. They buy real estate, cars and art. They start companies. The money then starts to trickle down. But because the 1% got the money first, there is what I call purchasing-power decay. The 1% buys the best houses on the best street, and whomever wants to compete with them has to convince them to sell their house to them. So when more money is printed, you have purchasing power decay that can be as much as 50% within a year. So the 1% is benefitting. 

I’m part of that 1%. We work hard, of course. But we own key parts of the economy and large parts of the controlled wealth, because we get the first pass on new money.

On a gold system that would be impossible. Everyone would have to be paid in gold or its value equivalent. Gold can only be extracted from a mine, and mining requires energy and labour.

Using gold as a currency would be a far more equitable system because you can’t cheat it, you can only seek productivity gains that everyone benefits from. It would be a system in which a worker that is productive and generates surplus can climb up the economic ladder.

Under a gold system, a family could move from poverty to the upper middle class without being cut off by these shortcuts.

In our current system we minimize the value of real commodities and real labour, always seeking a scalable way to extract or redistribute current wealth — not create more through productivity. 

TNM: The purchasing-power decay you speak of is illustrated in the problems facing today’s millennial generation.

RS: You’re seeing millennials today who can’t even achieve what their parents achieved. They have to share cars and housing. They have to use Uber because they can’t afford to own a car.

This has happened because there has been an accumulation of paper wealth that wasn’t earned through surplus or productivity.

In fact, productivity has collapsed as asset prices have increased. This has become a huge problem.

Millennials are willing to work hard. But because there has been no discipline, governments have been generating trade and budget deficits for years with fiat money.

The simple solution is: If you let people operate on a gold system, they can peg their surplus to themselves and aren’t exposed to factors that devalue currencies.

Gold is not going to make people rich. It just reflects the cost of production that can’t be devalued. Gold has been a good peg for food and energy prices for hundreds of year in markets that are not predictable. That’s very valuable.

The idea that gold is going to US$10,000 per oz. and will make gold bugs rich is bullshit. We have to open the debate about money. Can there be a gold system that is equitable? Let’s solve the technology and let the market decide.

Perhaps we are wrong, but we need challenges to a system that clearly isn’t working for 99% of the world. We feel we have a lot of solid math and history on our side.

TNM: What kind of feedback have you been getting, beyond the acceleration in your share price?

RS: Everyone we’ve spoken to — on the left, on the right, in Canada, in Europe, politicians — they are intrigued by the idea.

People from all spectrums get it, as long as it’s done correctly. They have no problem with it, as long as BitGold promotes tax compliance and anti-money laundering regulations. 

We don’t have a problem with the state. There has just been a misunderstanding of the economics.

We built this thing for people, as we thought it was needed, and people from all over the world are embracing it. Recently there was a day when we had over $200,000 come in.

We’re democratizing accessibility to a stable form of savings.

TNM: The level playing field aspect of it will appeal to many people.

RS: We felt we needed to do this. We understood the math. 

The problem with gold is that it’s linked to the U.S. dollar as an investment. 

We have unlinked it. We’re creating a live price system in 106 different currencies.

When you look at the charts going back 10 or 15 years, you can see that gold is up against every currency. The biggest bull market in gold didn’t occur from 2002–11, it occurred from 2011 until now. It occurred in Brazilian real, in Japanese yen and in Russian rubles. But nobody noticed. 

There is an opportunity here. Why do people in India buy gold? They do it because they’re pricing it in their local currency, not dollars, and their currency loses value compared to the food prices that make up 50% or more of their spending. They are not trying to get rich through asset speculation or investment, they understand that it is a savings, it’s a dowry and it’s the only thing they can pass on forever when they build a surplus. 

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