Abstract

The first commercial transaction with the first cryptocurrency in 2010 marked the start of a revolution in transactions. Blockchain and cryptocurrencies will dramatically transform how we do transactions, just as the Internet revolutionized how we communicate. Currently, more than 2,000 cryptocurrencies are quoted on the market, and many more are being launched in initial coin offerings for use as an exchange method in a specific business ecosystem or as rights to assets or liabilities. As an emerging fintech, cryptocurrencies open up many opportunities, but they also pose significant challenges and limitations. This paper analyzes the key factors for the successful development of a cryptocurrency from a consumer-behavior perspective. Using a technology acceptance theoretical framework, we test a model able to explain almost 85% of the intention to use cryptocurrencies. Surprisingly, risk was not a significant factor. This could be because most of the respondents considered operating with cryptocurrencies to be risky; the lack of variability in their responses to the questions about perceived risk would explain this lack of explanatory power. However, willingness to manage cryptocurrency risk could be a precondition for adoption. The performance expectancy for a given cryptocurrency was the most important factor for its success. The research was conducted in Spain with college-educated adults with basic knowledge of the Internet.

Highlights

  • The origin of blockchain and cryptocurrencies dates back to 2008, when Satoshi Nakamoto – the pseudonymous developer of blockchain and the cryptocurrency bitcoin – posted a paper to a cryptography forum entitled “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System” (Nakamoto, 2008a; Simonite, 2011)

  • When respondents were asked about their use in the near future, the score increased to an average of 4, very close to the breaking point between using or not using cryptocurrencies (5)

  • We proposed the aforementioned model based on variables accepted by the scientific and academic community with high explanatory power regarding variability in the intention to use new technologies and products

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Summary

Introduction

The origin of blockchain and cryptocurrencies dates back to 2008, when Satoshi Nakamoto – the pseudonymous developer of blockchain and the cryptocurrency bitcoin – posted a paper to a cryptography forum entitled “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System” (Nakamoto, 2008a; Simonite, 2011). The paper described a revolutionary technology to create a genuine decentralized peer-to-peer monetary system, arguing that “a purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution” Cryptocurrencies are based on blockchain but are not the only possible application. There is a dangerous relationship between blockchain and cryptocurrencies (Carson et al, 2018), being necessary to underline that cryptocurrencies are one of the multiple possibilities of blockchain technologies.

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