Billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya, a venture capitalist and former Facebook executive, recently argued that bitcoin has a “structural flaw” that could limit its long-term adoption by governments and central banks.
Speaking on the People by WTF podcast during the World Government Summit, Palihapitiya said that for a digital asset to be widely accepted at the sovereign level, it must have characteristics that make it suitable for central bank reserves.
According to Palihapitiya, bitcoin falls short on two important dimensions, privacy and fungibility. Fungibility refers to the idea that each unit of an asset is interchangeable and indistinguishable from another. With physical cash or gold, one unit is effectively identical to any other unit.
However, Bitcoin operates on a transparent blockchain where transaction histories are permanently recorded. Because coins can be traced back through past transactions, some entities may be associated with illegal activity, meaning that certain coins may be treated differently than others.
Palihapitiya argues that this traceability weakens bitcoin’s fungibility and reduces its suitability as a reserve asset for central banks.
So far, only one central bank has publicly announced the purchase of bitcoin, the Czech National Bank.
Instead, he says, gold meets both the privacy and fungibility requirements of government institutions, which is why central banks continue to hold large gold reserves.
For that reason, Palihapitiya suggested that bitcoin may struggle to achieve another tenfold increase in market value driven by central bank demand. Instead, he suggested that other crypto projects or smaller tokens may eventually address these limitations.
Palihapitiya remains optimistic about innovation in digital finance, particularly stablecoins, which are cryptocurrencies designed to maintain a stable value by being tied to assets such as the US dollar or commodities.
He pointed to the potential of gold-backed stablecoins as an example of financial innovation that could reduce friction in payments and settlement.
Meanwhile, Jason Calacanis, another venture investor and co-host of the All In podcast, discussed bitcoin-related business strategies with crypto-entrepreneur Erik Voorhees on the This Week in Startups podcast. Calacanis asked Voorhees about Strategy (MSTR), formerly MicroStrategy, the public company known to have the largest corporate treasury of bitcoin.
Voorhees, a longtime Bitcoin advocate and founder of crypto exchange ShapeShift, said the strategy of accumulating as much bitcoin as possible is coherent if the company strongly believes in bitcoin’s long-term value. Calacanis was more skeptical. He said when financial structures become difficult to explain or rely on new metrics, such as “community EBITDA,” that raises red flags for him as an investor.
This comes as hedge fund billionaire Ray Dalio recently noted that “there is only one gold.



