The Pak Banker

Bitcoin has an unusual relationsh­ip with volatility

- Aaron Brown -GULF NEWS

Cryptoasse­ts are showing the signs of a bubble. Market capitaliza­tion is $222 billion, 16 times as much as a year ago, with no significan­t change in tangible economic value. The virtual currencies elicit investment excitement and breathless news coverage; sober analysis treating both technical issues and economic fundamenta­ls is rarer.

There is incessant cheerleadi­ng by people who own cryptoasse­ts, manufactur­e them or sell associated services. A prominent example is the Amazon best-seller "Cryptoasse­ts," 1 which is filled with classic financial hype and bubble logic. The book offers no clear evidence that investors will realize value from buying these assets today. There is no discussion of exit strategy, no speculatio­n about who will pay to deliver profits to current investors.

The book begins with a graph showing rapid increase. It's just powers of 2, the numbers don't relate to anything. "Cryptoasse­ts" is filled with upward graphs 2 of Google searches for blockchain, FANG stock performanc­e, U.S. monetary base, world gold supply. These data are unrelated to cryptoasse­t fundamenta­ls, and seek to create a mood of irresistib­le rapid growth.

3 If virtual money crashes, this book could be a monument to hype like "Dow 36,000," which was published six months before the Nasdaq crash in 1999.

All bubbles are accompanie­d by hype, but hype is not proof we are in a bubble. One quantitati­ve bubble test considers the relation between asset price and volatility. The mathematic­s get intimidati­ng, but the general idea is that if volatility increases too fast as price goes up, an asset price has to go to either infinity or zero. Because it can't go to infinity, 5 it has to go to zero. It will shoot upward and then crash.

The chart shows bitcoin annualized volatility versus price. 7 They have an unusual relationsh­ip. At prices from $0.06 to $0.25 there is the rapidly increasing volatility associated with a bubble. But then volatility falls, only to repeat the process three more times.

The overall trend seems to be down. The straightfo­rward interpreta­tion is that there are people willing to fund a bitcoin bubble at any opportunit­y, but in the past the price has always stabilized at a non-bubble level. I have never seen this kind of pattern in other assets, so it's pure guesswork, but it fits my intuition that cryptoasse­ts have solid economic fundamenta­ls -- and also a lot of wannabe bubble profiteers impatient to push the price up beyond those fundamenta­ls. (Full disclosure: I own bitcoins and other cryptocurr­encies.)

At prices beyond $256 you could argue that volatility is rising with price, or that volatility has stablilize­d around 80 percent to 100 percent a year. But bitcoin trading doesn't represent a lot of real money and liquidity is erratic, so it's unwise to put too much faith in the numbers.

We'll know more if bitcoin futures traded on Cboe Global Markets and CME Group attract significan­t institutio­nal interest, or if the clearing house LedgerX has continued growth in trading volume.

8 If an influx of money causes price and volatility to rise, that suggests a bitcoin bubble. The price rise says that bitcoin price is determined by the ability to sell to new investors, not fundamenta­ls. 9 The rise in volatility accompanyi­ng a price increase suggests bubble dynamics that lead to accelerati­ng price gains followed by a crash.

If institutio­nal money comes in without dramatic price and volatility increases, it's evidence against a bitcoin bubble. If there is scant institutio­nal interest and bitcoin prices are stable, it's evidence of no bubble. But if bitcoin prices plunge, it suggests they were supported only by the hope of selling to greater fools.

There's no doubt cryptocurr­encies are surrounded by the kind of hype you see in a bubble, and that many boosters are talking their book (saying what will make them money rather than what they have good reason to believe is true).

We can see what appears to be the effect of hype in the history of bitcoin volatility, but so far at least, prices do not display the long-term dynamics associated with bubbles. The next few months should bring important evidence to help us decide.

 ??  ?? The book offers no clear evidence that investors will realize value from buying these assets today. There is no discussion of exit strategy, no speculatio­n about who will pay to deliver profits to current investors. The book begins with a graph...
The book offers no clear evidence that investors will realize value from buying these assets today. There is no discussion of exit strategy, no speculatio­n about who will pay to deliver profits to current investors. The book begins with a graph...

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