New Straits Times

Strategist­s: Bitcoin surge mirrors 2017 trend

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LONDON: The best-known cryptocurr­ency has surged beyond its “intrinsic value,” mirroring a similar move in 2017, which preceded a slump, wrote strategist­s including Nikolaos Panigirtzo­glou, a global market strategist at JPMorgan, in a note on Friday.

They came to this conclusion by treating Bitcoin as a commodity and calculatin­g its “cost of production” using inputs such as estimated computatio­nal power, electricit­y expense and hardware energy efficiency.

“Over the past few days, the actual price has moved sharply over marginal cost,” they wrote.

“This divergence between actual and intrinsic values carries some echoes of the spike higher in late 2017, and at the time, this divergence was resolved mostly by a reduction in actual prices.”

Bitcoin jumped as much as 17 per cent in early Asia trading yesterday.

After crashing from its December 2017 high above US$19,000 (RM79,230) and languishin­g for most of the first quarter below US$4,000, Bitcoin sparked to life again in April when it rose past US$5,000.

The rally kicked on this month with the digital currency gaining about 50 per cent.

As of 9.10am, here, it was up 11 per cent to just below the US$7,900 level, according to Bloomberg composite pricing.

“Defining an intrinsic or fair value for any cryptocurr­ency is clearly challengin­g,” the strategist­s wrote as a caveat.

“Indeed, views range from some researcher­s arguing that it has no fundamenta­l value, to others estimating fair values well in excess of current prices.”

 ??  ?? A cryptocurr­ency mining rig at a Bitfarms facility in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada. Bitcoin jumps as much as 17 per cent in early Asia trading yesterday. BLOOMBERG PIC
A cryptocurr­ency mining rig at a Bitfarms facility in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada. Bitcoin jumps as much as 17 per cent in early Asia trading yesterday. BLOOMBERG PIC

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