‘Banks Will Fall First’: Tim Draper Downplays Quantum Threat to BitcoinTL;DR:
- Tim Draper downplayed quantum-computing fears, arguing banks and fiat systems are more vulnerable than Bitcoin.
- He said Bitcoin holdings are more secure than dollars in banks, and the network could hard fork to the last secure block if needed.
- The debate remains live after Google Quantum AI lowered estimated ECDSA-256 attack requirements, while BIP 360 proposes quantum-resistant address formats for Bitcoin as a possible future defense path.
Tim Draper is pushing back against one of Bitcoin’s more dramatic fear cycles: the idea that quantum computing will break the network before it can adapt. The billionaire venture capitalist argued that traditional banks and fiat systems face the more immediate threat, saying Bitcoin holdings are more secure than dollars kept in banking institutions. The striking claim is that banks would crack before Bitcoin, because Draper sees legacy finance as the softer target.
Benzinga asked me about quantum computing and Bitcoin.
The answer… Bitcoin is more secure than the dollars sitting in your bank account.
Quantum will crack the banks long before it touches the blockchain.
Everyone's panicking about quantum breaking Bitcoin's encryption while…
— Tim Draper (@TimDraper) June 9, 2026
Quantum risk becomes a banking comparison
Draper’s argument does not dismiss quantum computing entirely. Instead, it reframes the risk hierarchy. He said quantum computers would hack banks long before touching the blockchain, and added that Bitcoin could, in an extreme scenario, hard fork back to the last secure block. That possibility is technically available, but it would require broad agreement from miners and node operators. The reassurance depends on social coordination as much as code, which is both Bitcoin’s strength and its obvious complication.
His confidence fits a long pattern. Draper first encountered Bitcoin when it traded near $4, though a hardware manufacturer problem delayed his mining until the price reached $30. He later lost his early holdings in the Mt. Gox collapse, then bought nearly 30,000 confiscated Bitcoins at a 2014 U.S. Marshals auction for roughly $632 each. That history explains his unusually durable conviction, including repeated forecasts that Bitcoin can overtake the dollar and eventually reach $250,000.
Still, the technical debate is not imaginary. A March 2026 whitepaper from Google Quantum AI lowered the estimated barrier for cracking ECDSA-256, saying fewer than 500,000 physical qubits could be enough, a 20-fold reduction from 2019 estimates. Proposals such as BIP 360, Pay-to-Merkle-Root, have been introduced to create quantum-resistant address formats. The practical question is whether preparation outruns capability, especially as Draper again projects $250,000 within 18 months after earlier deadlines slipped from 2022 to 2025. His latest position is less that quantum risk is irrelevant, and more that Bitcoin may remain more adaptable than the financial systems critics assume are safer. For markets, the nuance matters because confidence depends on upgrades, credible migration paths and not dismissive optimism alone. That is a powerful argument, but not a finished technical answer for cautious holders yet.
read the full story
TL;DR:
- Tim Draper downplayed quantum-computing fears, arguing banks and fiat systems are more vulnerable than Bitcoin.
- He said Bitcoin holdings are more secure than dollars in banks, and the network could hard fork to the last secure block if needed.
- The debate remains live after Google Quantum AI lowered estimated ECDSA-256 attack requirements, while BIP 360 proposes quantum-resistant address formats for Bitcoin as a possible future defense path.
Tim Draper is pushing back against one of Bitcoin’s more dramatic fear cycles: the idea that quantum computing will break the network before it can adapt. The billionaire venture capitalist argued that traditional banks and fiat systems face the more immediate threat, saying Bitcoin holdings are more secure than dollars kept in banking institutions. The striking claim is that banks would crack before Bitcoin, because Draper sees legacy finance as the softer target.
Benzinga asked me about quantum computing and Bitcoin.
The answer… Bitcoin is more secure than the dollars sitting in your bank account.
Quantum will crack the banks long before it touches the blockchain.
Everyone's panicking about quantum breaking Bitcoin's encryption while…
— Tim Draper (@TimDraper) June 9, 2026
Quantum risk becomes a banking comparison
Draper’s argument does not dismiss quantum computing entirely. Instead, it reframes the risk hierarchy. He said quantum computers would hack banks long before touching the blockchain, and added that Bitcoin could, in an extreme scenario, hard fork back to the last secure block. That possibility is technically available, but it would require broad agreement from miners and node operators. The reassurance depends on social coordination as much as code, which is both Bitcoin’s strength and its obvious complication.
His confidence fits a long pattern. Draper first encountered Bitcoin when it traded near $4, though a hardware manufacturer problem delayed his mining until the price reached $30. He later lost his early holdings in the Mt. Gox collapse, then bought nearly 30,000 confiscated Bitcoins at a 2014 U.S. Marshals auction for roughly $632 each. That history explains his unusually durable conviction, including repeated forecasts that Bitcoin can overtake the dollar and eventually reach $250,000.
Still, the technical debate is not imaginary. A March 2026 whitepaper from Google Quantum AI lowered the estimated barrier for cracking ECDSA-256, saying fewer than 500,000 physical qubits could be enough, a 20-fold reduction from 2019 estimates. Proposals such as BIP 360, Pay-to-Merkle-Root, have been introduced to create quantum-resistant address formats. The practical question is whether preparation outruns capability, especially as Draper again projects $250,000 within 18 months after earlier deadlines slipped from 2022 to 2025. His latest position is less that quantum risk is irrelevant, and more that Bitcoin may remain more adaptable than the financial systems critics assume are safer. For markets, the nuance matters because confidence depends on upgrades, credible migration paths and not dismissive optimism alone. That is a powerful argument, but not a finished technical answer for cautious holders yet.
read the full storyBitcoin Trades Near $61,300 After Worst Week Since FTX Collapse Wipes $390 Billion From Crypto
Bitcoin has recorded its worst weekly performance since the 2022 FTX collapse, sliding below $60,000…
Crypto News Today (June 10): BTC Crashes to $61K, The Trump Family Makes $2.3Bn from Crypto and Japan Introduces ‘Crypto Vouchers’
In today’s crypto news (June 10), Bitcoin ended a few days of positive price action by…
Romain Jerome Moon Invader Bitcoin Review: The Original Swiss Bitcoin Watch (2014–2026)
Before Hublot, before Franck Muller, before TAG Heuer’s NFT connected watch, there was the…
Bitcoin Holds $60K but a Drop to $50,000 Isn’t Off the Table
Bitcoin is clinging to $60,000. And the charts, right now, aren’t exactly inspiring…
XRP ETF Beats Bitcoin, Solana and Ethereum Products: But Why Does Price Struggle?
XRP overtakes Solana, Bitcoin and Ethereum on ETF market, even though the price is yet to follow the…
Years In The Making: Why The Bitcoin Price Is Headed To $220,000
Bitcoin has been forming a pattern for years now, and even with the uncertain price movements, this…
Bitcoin Traders Watching Closely As Trump Hints At Imminent Iran Deal
Bitcoin is already being eyed for a move toward $65,000 if a US-Iran deal is sealed, with US…
Is Bitcoin Cheap? Grayscale Weighs in
A new Grayscale report suggests the cryptocurrency is technically undervalued.
Bitcoin Slides Toward $62K While Bear Market Patterns Keep Repeating
Bitcoin can’t catch a break. The price is pushing back toward $62,000, and the chart looks…
Live updates: What next for bitcoin as it faces headwinds from Fed rates to Claude's Mythos
Anthropic's IPO pipeline, not its new model, is what crypto traders should track.
Tim Draper Says Bitcoin is Safer from Quantum than Banks
Tim Draper says quantum computing will crack banks before it touches Bitcoin. But the reason has…
Bitcoin Back At Production Cost: Analyst Says Best Value Zone Starts Here
The founder of Capriole Investments has highlighted how Bitcoin is at the threshold of a zone that…
Bitcoin and gold fall together as a rate-hike bet hits every hedge
The relief rally that lifted crypto off last week's lows is unwinding alongside tech stocks and…
Bitcoin ETFs are no bigger today than when Trump won the election
Net assets of U.S.-listed spot ETFs have fallen to levels last seen just after Trump won the…
Wintermute Warns Bitcoin Bottom Is Unclear With ETF Outflows Near $3B
Wintermute said bitcoin’s latest decline was driven mainly by U.S. institutional selling and ETF…
Bitcoin Price Back Under Pressure After Recovery Hopes Fade
Bitcoin price started a downside correction from the $64,600 zone. BTC is showing bearish signs and…
Bitwise Sees Bitcoin as Early Warning Sign for Global Risk-Off Shift
Bitcoin isn’t just a trade. According to Bitwise, it’s basically a canary in the coal…
Bitcoin price prediction: BTC bounce to $71K possible IF…
A Bitcoin bounce was underway, but market participants should not expect a trend reversal, though a…
Bitcoin Flashes One Of Its Rarest Demand Signals In Six Years – Details
Bitcoin is holding above $62,000 after the massive drop that defined last week’s market action…