Waterloo Region Record

Pot stocks yesterday’s news as Canada gripped by Bitcoin fever

- Kristine Owram and Doug Alexander

TORONTO — The country that brought you the first marijuana unicorn is plunging headlong into the next big thing: cryptocurr­encies.

Little-known Canadian stocks such as Hive Blockchain Technologi­es Ltd., Glance Technologi­es Inc., and NetCents Technology Inc. have surged as much as 20-fold this year, giving retail investors a way to embrace the mania without actually having to buy bitcoins.

The country counts at least eight cryptocurr­ency-related stocks with a market value totalling about $2 billion, making it a burgeoning hub for bitcoin listings. And there may be more ways to invest soon: At least two Canadian firms filed to launch what could be among the first bitcoin exchange-traded funds.

Canada’s stock markets are no strangers to investing fads, with cobalt, lithium and marijuana stocks all bubbling higher this year. The country’s TSX Venture Exchange has been dubbed the “wild west,” the penny stocks among its more than 1,700 listings gyrating wildly from one day to the next.

Cryptocurr­ency experts say the fast-evolving bitcoin sector is a classic case of buyer beware, not unlike the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s when shares would spike in value simply because a company had “.com” in its name. Bitcoin, one of several digital currencies, briefly topped $11,000 on Nov. 29 and was trading at about $10,780 on Friday, up roughly 11-fold this year.

“There is an arbitrage that comes from being a public company with ‘something blockchain’ in the name,” said Lex Sokolin, director of fintech strategy at Autonomous Research in London. “The demand is really high for anything crypto and the supply is very low, so you’re not really winning on your merit, you’re just winning because of the market dynamic.”

The market is crying out for a “traditiona­l vehicle at a really low price point,” like an exchange traded fund, he said. “Make the whole thing boring and vanilla and remove the mystery of it.”

Toronto-based Evolve Funds Group Inc. and Purpose Investment­s Inc. hope to do just that. It filed regulatory documents to launch ETFs based on the bitcoin futures contracts that will begin trading Dec. 18 on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Horizons ETFs Management Canada Inc. is also “interested in creating an ETF that would give investors multiple types of exposure to bitcoin,” co-chief executive Steve Hawkins said.

Raj Lala, CEO of Evolve, said the ETF will be a way for investors to bet on bitcoin “without worrying about the fact that you might be buying physical bitcoin from some unscrupulo­us service.”

Here are some Canadian companies in the cryptocurr­ency business, all based in Vancouver.

Hive Blockchain Technologi­es Ltd., a cryptocurr­ency miner backed by Canadian mining maverick Frank Giustra. The firm owns a data centre in Iceland with options to acquire more facilities in other cold countries which keep the computer cooling costs down. Shares are up about 255 per cent since it began trading as a bitcoin miner on Sept. 18, giving it a market value of $847 million.

Glance Technologi­es Inc., a creator of a mobile payment app for restaurant­s that’s seeking to buy the Blockimpac­t cryptocurr­ency platform from Ztudium Ltd. for $100,000. Shares in Glance have risen about 1,270 per cent this year to reach a market value of $285 million.

NetCents Technology Inc, an online payment processing platform that provides services for managing electronic payments, including e-wallets, and has its own cryptocurr­ency NetCents Coin. Shares in the firm have jumped 1,794 per cent this year for a market value of $166 million.

Global Blockchain Technologi­es Corp., an investment company providing investors access to a basket of holdings in blockchain and cryptocurr­encies. The stock has jumped 1,365 per cent this year to give it a market value of about $53 million.\

360 Blockchain Inc. aims to buy stakes in California cryptocurr­ency miner SV CryptoLab, and media directory Pressland to transform the business into a blockchain-powered platform to debunk fake news. 360 Blockchain, which aims to create its own cryptocurr­ency next year, has jumped 525 per cent this year and has a $28-million market value.

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