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'Bitcoin transactions can be monitored': Ray Dalio explains why central banks won't touc

• https://www.activistpost.com, Omkar Godbole

What to know:

Ray Dalio joins the privacy debate, saying Bitcoin's full transparency makes it less likely to be adopted by central banks.

He added that bitcoin's correlation with tech stocks and relatively small market size put it at a disadvantage compared with gold as a reserve hedge.

Bitcoin's transparency was once considered one of its greatest strengths. Now, Ray Dalio says, it may be the very reason central banks won't adopt it as a reserve asset, even though corporations and institutional investors have embraced it.

The billionaire hedge fund manager, who is also a bitcoin investor, said on X that, "Bitcoin lacks privacy. Transactions can be monitored and potentially controlled, which is why central banks aren't looking to hold it."

Ray Dalio has previously said he allocates about 1% of his portfolio to bitcoin.

Bitcoin, the world's largest blockchain network, operates as a decentralized peer-to-peer system built on a public ledger. Every transaction is permanently recorded on this transparent ledger, allowing anyone to view it in real time.

Anyone can open a Bitcoin block explorer, enter a wallet address into the search bar, and view the entire transaction history associated with it. While wallet addresses are pseudonymous rather than directly tied to identities, blockchain analytics firms and law enforcement agencies can often trace the movement of funds and link activity back to individuals or institutions.

https://6249d8531bf459b34934f7e2495bdb43.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-45/html/container.html

In other words, the flow of BTC, the blockchain's native token, is highly transparent and traceable, even if it is not always directly tied to real-world identities.

This level of transparency, often praised by Bitcoin supporters, may also be what keeps central banks away. Imagine being a central bank and accumulating an asset whose flows can be tracked in real time on a public ledger.

The lack of privacy is also a concern for large institutional players. At Consensus Hong Kong in February, participants noted that the mass adoption of blockchain technology at the institutional level may ultimately depend on stronger privacy features, particularly for large transactions.

The market seems to align with the growing expert consensus on privacy. For instance, the privacy-focused coin zcash (ZEC) has surged over 800% since early 2025. Bitcoin, meanwhile, is down over 10%.

Correlated to stocks

Dalio's concerns, however, go beyond central bank adoption. He pointed to structural issues that limit bitcoin's appeal as a reserve asset compared to traditional alternatives like gold.

One of them is its tendency to take cues from Wall Street, especially the technology stocks, rather than acting as an independent store of value during periods of stress.


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