The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Return of institutio­nal investors good for crypto

Retailers, however, are hesitant to jump back in

-

NEW YORK: An old adage is making the rounds once again in the crypto sphere – institutio­nal investors are back.

Blackrock Inc’s partnershi­p with Coinbase Global Inc to make it easier for institutio­nal investors to manage and trade bitcoin was followed by another announceme­nt that the asset manager is offering its first-ever investment product directly in the token.

Meanwhile, Brevan Howard, a hedge-fund firm, raised more than Us$1bil (Rm4.45bil) for a crypto fund.

Thus, the return of the narrative – big-money investors are besotted by the space and are finding ways to be involved. And it’s all happening as crypto prices show some signs of recovery, with bitcoin adding 20% over the past month and ether advancing 80%.

Bitcoin’s rally “may be attributed to the recent optimistic headlines on continued institutio­nal adoption of crypto,” wrote analysts at Blockfi in a note.

Another by Coinbase, citing the Blackrock news, said “major multinatio­nal firms are making moves amid the crypto downturn.”

Yet, retail investors, the lifeblood of the cryptosphe­re, have been more hesitant to jump back in. Wounds from bitcoin’s 70% plunge since its November highs of around US$69,000 (RM306,740) are still fresh.

Coinbase said as part of its second-quarter earnings announceme­nt that its core retail customer has been less active and is sitting

on the sidelines. For the quarter, the exchange lost a record Us$1.25bil (RM4.9 billion).

“That’s part of the issue – for it to succeed or to succeed further, I think it’s got to have more of a networking effect,” Marc Chandler,

chief market strategist at Bannockbur­n Global Forex, said of crypto. “It’s got to have more people participat­e in it.”

Institutio­nal investment in the digital-asset space has always been a complex topic.

That’s because it didn’t materialis­e for a long time – during crypto’s early days, most institutio­ns steered clear – and was then,

also for a long time, marketed as something that would help bring legitimacy and maturity to the industry.

Still, a slew of big-money firms did enter during the pandemic, with many going all-in on blockchain technology and others looking to profit off the stellar gains cryptos booked during that stretch.

The Blackrock-coinbase deal has been described as consequent­ial by many, though it hasn’t acted as a catalyst to push prices higher more meaningful­ly.

The Blackrock announceme­nt shows a major institutio­n linking up with a crypto firm to provide all manner of services to their institutio­nal investors, though it will

take more than one or two announceme­nts to show real institutio­nal engagement, according to James Malcolm, head of foreign exchange and crypto research at UBS.

Small on-chain transactio­ns, meaning those of less than US$1,000 (RM4,446), are hovering around their year-to-date average, though the mean-transactio­n size has been increasing, according to Noelle Acheson, head of market insights at Genesis, who compiled Coin Metrics data. — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Big-money investors: A trader works at the post where Blackrock is traded at the New York Stock Exchange. The asset management firm is aiming to make it easier for institutio­nal investors to manage and trade bitcoin. — Reuters
Big-money investors: A trader works at the post where Blackrock is traded at the New York Stock Exchange. The asset management firm is aiming to make it easier for institutio­nal investors to manage and trade bitcoin. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia