The Pak Banker

Cryptocurr­ency markets aren't all the same

- Leonid Bershidsky

There's a compelling reason to consider what's going on with cryptocurr­encies a purely speculativ­e boom- and- bust roller- coaster: Over a threemonth period, the prices of all the top coins and tokens are rather strongly correlated, going up and down in unison. What does that make them if not the 21st- century incarnatio­n of tulip bulbs?

It's not so simple, though. In the last 30 days, which include a spectacula­r decline in the dollar price of Bitcoin, the correlatio­ns haven't been so reliable. In some cases, they appear to have broken down. I don't think that's an accident.

Apart from relatively ignorant speculator­s, the cryptocurr­ency- trading community includes people who are genuinely interested in various applicatio­ns of the blockchain technology and who are making informed bets on its particular flavors.

I calculated the correlatio­ns of the price of Bitcoin with the prices of the next 10 cryptocurr­encies by market capitaliza­tion. They turned out to be the strongest, both over three months and over 30 days, in the case of three "altcoins" - IOTA, Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash. The latter two are Bitcoin "forks" - offshoots of the original currency meant roughly for the same purposes: payments and storing value.

Both were meant to reduce

Bitcoin's considerab­le friction ( long processing times and high processing fees) and enable smaller, everyday transactio­ns more efficientl­y. IOTA is something of a different beast: Its developers bill it as intended specifical­ly for the internet of things, a medium for fee- free machine- to- machine payments. It's a kind of Bitcoin for robots, so essentiall­y still a variation of the original idea.

There are two other broad categories of cryptocurr­ency among the biggest "altcoins": Those launched by platforms designed for "smart contracts" and initial coin offerings ( Ethereum, NEO, NEM, EOS), and those "minted" by projects working on blockchain- based transactio­n processing for the finance industry ( Ripple, Cardano). Stellar, the nonprofit project whose cryptocurr­ency is called the Lumen, falls into both these categories.

Over the last 30 days, the currencies launched by Ethereum competitor­s have showed the strongest price correlatio­ns with Ether, Ethereum's currency. And they haven't been moving in unison with Bitcoin. The cryptocurr­ency market is younger than the rapidly evolving technology itself, and the high volatility has lured a lot of oblivious gamblers. They have whipped up clouds of froth. It makes sense, however, to look beyond that.

One can be skeptical, like my colleagues on the Bloomberg View editorial board, that crypto - decentrali­zed or harnessed by central banks - is the future of money. In that case, it makes sense to stay away from Bitcoin, Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash.

But that doesn't rule out believing in other applicatio­ns of the technology. For example, if one holds that initial coin offerings are a sound way to attract investment and that the blockchain is good for registerin­g property rights and storing contracts, then Ethereum and its competitor­s are worth watching and perhaps backing. Deciding which ones depends on whose technology or market one likes best: There are different arguments, for example, in favor of Chinabased NEO and for EOS, with its focus on fast processing.

For a believer in the blockchain as the ultimate replacemen­t for the current money transfer infrastruc­ture such as the Swift system, Ripple's and Cardano's digital currencies make sense.

But these investment­s may be particular­ly risky, since it's not quite clear whether the currencies will ever gain broad acceptance as part of their creators' increasing­ly popular money- moving solutions.

After a while, any market craze gets boring and discerning investors replace speculator­s. It happened to dot- coms in the early 2000s, and it's starting to happen to cryptocurr­encies in 2018.

Eventually, some blockchain applicatio­ns will turn out to be hot, others not - and some investors who buy and hold, as opposed to speculator­s, will make money as a satisfying result of smart bets.

 ??  ?? In some cases, they appear to have broken down. I don't think that's an accident. Apart from relatively ignorant speculator­s, the cryptocurr­encytradin­g community includes people who are genuinely interested in various applicatio­ns of the blockchain...
In some cases, they appear to have broken down. I don't think that's an accident. Apart from relatively ignorant speculator­s, the cryptocurr­encytradin­g community includes people who are genuinely interested in various applicatio­ns of the blockchain...

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