What is cryptocurrency? A beginner's guide
Cryptocurrency is digital money that runs on a blockchain. You can send it across borders, hold it as savings, or trade it for profit. The Philippines has one of the highest crypto adoption rates in Southeast Asia. This guide covers how it works, what you can do with it, and how to get started safely.
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What is cryptocurrency?
Cryptocurrency is a form of digital money. Unlike pesos or dollars, it does not exist as paper bills or coins. It exists as records on a shared digital ledger called a blockchain. When you send Bitcoin to a friend, the blockchain updates to reflect the new ownership.
Cryptocurrency is a form of digital money. Unlike pesos or dollars, it does not exist as paper bills or coins. It exists as records on a shared digital ledger called a blockchain. When you send Bitcoin to a friend, the blockchain updates to reflect the new ownership.
Cryptocurrencies are issued and managed by software, not by central banks. Bitcoin, the first and most well-known cryptocurrency, was created in 2009. Since then, thousands of other digital assets have launched. Some are competitors to Bitcoin. Others serve very different purposes.
In this guide, we use cryptocurrency and digital assets interchangeably. The financial industry increasingly uses digital assets because it covers a broader category, including tokens that represent things like real-world assets and access rights.
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Blockchain in plain terms
A blockchain is a record book that anyone can read but no one can secretly change. Every transaction is grouped into a block. Each block links to the one before it, forming a chain. Once a block is added, altering it would require rewriting every block that came after, on every copy of the ledger worldwide. That makes the record practically tamper-proof.
A blockchain is a record book that anyone can read but no one can secretly change. Every transaction is grouped into a block. Each block links to the one before it, forming a chain. Once a block is added, altering it would require rewriting every block that came after, on every copy of the ledger worldwide. That makes the record practically tamper-proof.
Blockchains are maintained by networks of computers. No single company runs Bitcoin or Ethereum. Anyone can participate in maintaining the network and verifying transactions. This is what makes cryptocurrency decentralized.
To send or receive cryptocurrency, you need a wallet. A wallet is software, or sometimes a small hardware device, that stores your private keys. Private keys are what prove you own the coins in a particular address. If you lose your private keys, you lose access to your funds permanently.
Decentralized
No bank or government controls Bitcoin. The network is maintained by users worldwide, making it resistant to single points of failure.
Borderless
You can send digital assets to anyone with an internet connection, anywhere in the world, often within minutes.
Programmable
Newer blockchains like Ethereum let developers build apps directly on top, enabling things like lending, trading, and stablecoins.
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Major categories of digital assets
Bitcoin is the original cryptocurrency. It is often described as digital gold, mostly used as a store of value. Bitcoin has a fixed supply cap of 21 million coins. No new coins will ever be created beyond that limit.
Bitcoin is the original cryptocurrency. It is often described as digital gold, mostly used as a store of value. Bitcoin has a fixed supply cap of 21 million coins. No new coins will ever be created beyond that limit.
Ethereum is the second largest. It introduced smart contracts, which are programs that run on the blockchain. This made Ethereum the foundation for thousands of apps, including stablecoins, decentralized exchanges, and tokenized assets.
Stablecoins are digital assets pegged to a stable currency, usually the US dollar. USDT and USDC are the most common. Filipinos use stablecoins to hold value in dollar terms without opening a US bank account, and to send or receive money across borders cheaply.
Memecoins like Dogecoin and Shiba Inu are highly speculative tokens, often inspired by internet culture. They can rise and fall sharply over short periods. Treat them as entertainment more than investment.
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The use cases that matter
In the Philippines, crypto is used for several practical reasons. First, remittances. Sending money via traditional banks can take days and cost 5 to 10% in fees. Sending stablecoins or Bitcoin can take minutes and cost a fraction of a peso. Many Filipino families overseas use crypto rails to send funds home.
In the Philippines, crypto is used for several practical reasons. First, remittances. Sending money via traditional banks can take days and cost 5 to 10% in fees. Sending stablecoins or Bitcoin can take minutes and cost a fraction of a peso. Many Filipino families overseas use crypto rails to send funds home.
Second, savings. With peso inflation eating into bank deposits, some Filipinos hold a portion of their savings in stablecoins or Bitcoin to preserve purchasing power.
Third, trading. Active traders buy and sell crypto for profit, the same way they would trade stocks. Crypto markets run 24/7, including weekends and holidays. This appeals to people who cannot trade during regular business hours.
Fourth, access to global financial products. Stablecoins can earn yield. Tokenized real-world assets are starting to make traditional investments available to anyone with a wallet, no broker required.
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