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Crypto Is Tumbling, but in Argentina It’s Still a Safer Bet

BUENOS AIRES — Romina Sejas’s entry into the world of cryptocurrency — in a country where digital currencies have soared in popularity despite their volatility — started with pizza.

She was helping prepare pizza dough at a friend’s house a few years ago outside Mendoza, a ‌midsize city in western Argentina. The friend suggested leavening the dough in his mine. “I was so confused,” Ms. Sejas said. “I thought mines involved men with helmets and picks.”

Instead, he opened a door into a room where shelves were stacked with whirring computers. Known as miners in tech jargon, the computers work nonstop, verifying cryptocurrency transactions and rewarding their owners in ‌digital currency. They consume so much energy that the room was a functional oven.

Ms. Sejas’s friend — who mines ether, one of the world’s most popular cryptocurrencies — ‌explained that getting into cryptocurrency had raised his monthly salary by nearly 40 percent, from $800 doing odd jobs to $1,100.

Ms. Sejas soon became a cryptocurrency convert, joining a wave of Argentines turning to digital currencies as a way to earn more, increase their savings and even conduct everyday business.

Even though the cryptocurrency market has cratered in recent months, many Argentines see it as a safe haven ‌in a country where surging inflation and a grinding economic crisis have battered the national currency, the peso, and people’s bank accounts.

“Money here is like ice cream,” said Marcos Buscaglia, an economist in Buenos Aires, the capital. “If you keep a peso for too long, it melts in terms of how much you can buy with it.”

Machines, known in tech jargon as miners, are part of the process of producing cryptocurrency. These are at so-called cryptocurrency farm in La Plata, Argentina.Credit…Sarah Pabst for The New York Times

Because so few Argentines trust the peso, they prefer to save in other currencies, including dollars.

About one-third of Argentines believed that savings kept in pesos in a local bank would hold onto their value over two years, the lowest percentage among respondents in 15 countries surveyed in June by Morning Consult, a data firm based in Washington.

Nearly 60 percent of Argentines believed that Bitcoin, one of the most popular cryptocurrencies, would retain the value of their savings over that same period, the survey said.

With inflation expected to reach 90 percent by December, the peso’s worth keeps tumbling, pushing up prices of everyday products, from toilet paper to tuna fish, and making it virtually impossible to save.

The ongoing global supply chain challenges and the war in Ukraine have contributed to rising prices, but many economists blame Argentina’s woes on years of excessive government spending. Since the government does not collect enough revenue to make up the shortfall, the central bank prints pesos — pushing inflation even higher.

Now, many Argentines are turning to cryptocurrencies as one way to escape the peso. About one-third of Argentines said they bought or sold cryptocurrencies at least once a month, double the percentage of people in the United States, according to a separate survey by Morning Consult.

But cryptocurrency, given its instability, also brings risks.

Vicente Cappelletti, 26, said he had lost around $1,000, about 10 percent of his savings, when TerraUSD, a so-called stablecoin — a type of cryptocurrency that can be pegged to government currencies like the dollar — collapsed in May.

Mr. Cappelletti, an industrial engineer, said it was easy to lose money “if you are not on top of this all the time and don’t have a lot of information.” He sold all the savings he had held in cryptocurrencies for pesos and put them in a traditional investment fund.

Cryptocurrency consultants at work in La Plata, Argentina. Digital currencies are popular among Argentines trying to increase their savings.Credit…Sarah Pabst for The New York Times

Pablo Sabatella, who runs an organization in Buenos Aires that offers cryptocurrency classes, said hundreds of people had contacted him in the days after TerraUSD imploded, desperate to recover their money.

“Most people don’t understand what they are doing,” he said.

Bitcoin’s value has dropped from $65,000 last November to about $24,000 today, nearly double the fall in value of the peso. But many Argentines believe cryptocurrencies will rebound — unlike the peso.

Still, for some, cryptocurrency has brought welcome financial benefits.

Ms. Sejas, who worked as a waitress and in telemarketing, earns a living as a cryptocurrency consultant and by teaching workshops about digital currencies. She runs an online marketplace with 7,000 members who can use cryptocurrency to buy almost anything — from hiking boots to a house.

Ms. Sejas grew up in a working-class ‌family without access to the internet. Her parents did not finish middle school or have bank accounts. “My family used to measure the length of toilet paper rolls we had, because we had very little,’’ she said.

The money she has made from cryptocurrency has transformed her life. “I’m studying law at a private university,” she said. “I’ve done all the health checks I never did growing up‌.”

Across the world, people in low-income and emerging countries have become the biggest users of cryptocurrencies, according to various reports, overtaking the United States and Europe.

Digital coins are prized in countries where the local money is volatile and where governments have made it harder for citizens to buy foreign currencies.

Computers at a crypto farm. More workers in Argentina than any other country choose to receive part of their pay in cryptocurrencies.Credit…Sarah Pabst for The New York Times

Two poor countries, El Salvador and the Central African Republic, have even adopted Bitcoin as another official national currency — though the bet has not paid off in El Salvador, and it’s too early to tell whether it will do so in the Central African Republic.

Argentina provides some clues about the appeal of cryptocurrencies.

Argentines have long looked to the dollar as a safe haven. Saving in dollars “is tattooed into our DNA,” said Daniel Convertini, 34, who works in communications for a ride-hailing company. “I learned to do it from my dad and my grandfather, not because I read it in some financial newspaper.”

Argentines are thought to hold more dollars in cash or in foreign financial institutions than almost any other population — other than Americans, said Gian Maria Milesi-Ferretti, an economist at the Brookings Institution.

But three years ago, the Argentine government made it more difficult to buy U.S. currency. Argentines can legally purchase only $200 a month and have to pay hefty taxes on every transaction.

Instead, many people have turned to the black market for dollars, and the streets of downtown Buenos Aires are filled with money-changers who whisper their conversion rates at passers-by.

But digital currencies provide an advantage by not requiring people to haul around large stashes of bills.

“We offered a way around the currency controls by selling crypto dollars,” said Julián Fraiese, a founder of Buenbit, an Argentine cryptocurrency exchange that focuses on stablecoins pegged to the dollar. The company said it had added 200,000 users in the seven months after government controls on dollars were tightened in 2019.

Ismael Loyo, a taxi driver who moved to Argentina from Venezuela, keeps all his savings in cryptocurrency.Credit…Sarah Pabst for The New York Times

Ismael Loyo, 34, a taxi driver who moved to Argentina from Venezuela in 2018, turned to cryptocurrency after seeing the peso devalue rapidly, a repeat of what he had experienced back at home. As soon as he gets paid, he logs onto an exchange online and buys cryptocurrencies.

Aware of the vagaries of the digital currency market, he explained that he gets out of a currency “that only devalues” and gets into a currency, which, even though it is volatile, “maintains its value in the long term and goes up.”

For people like Mr. Loyo, who has lived in two countries pummeled by high inflation, Bitcoin seems less a speculative bet than a necessity. “Maybe if I lived in another country, I would never have had to learn about all this,” he said.

Still, the plunging value of cryptocurrencies has taken a toll, and concerns over its risks have led to greater regulatory scrutiny.

Buenbit recently fired nearly half of its employees, and days after two Argentine banks had started giving customers the option of buying and selling cryptocurrencies, the country’s Central Bank barred such services.

But because many Argentines have such little faith in their government’s management of the economy, cryptocurrency, despite its turbulence, remains in high demand.

The Rev. Fabián Báez helps organize technology classes that include showing students how to open a digital wallet to start collecting cryptocurrency coins.Credit…Sarah Pabst for The New York Times

More workers in Argentina than any other country, including many freelancers in jobs like software developers and translators, choose to receive part of their pay in cryptocurrencies, according to Deel, a payroll company used by more than 100,000 workers in 150 nations.

“Technology is the language of the world to come,” said the Rev. Fabián Báez, a priest who helps organize technology classes in Buenos Aires that include showing students how to open a digital wallet to start collecting cryptocurrency coins.

In Buenos Aires, signs on public buses lure people with promises of high returns on stablecoins. Inside a busy subway station, an advertisement declares: “Beat inflation. Buy Bitcoin.”

“I prefer to expose myself to the risks of crypto,” Mr. Convertini, the ride-hailing employee, said, “than the risks of the Argentine government.”

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