Bangkok Post

CRYPTO FEVER

A Bloomberg index of digital coins is up about 66% in 2020, exceeding gold’s gain.

- JOANNA OSSINGER

A cryptocurr­ency mania known as decentrali­sed finance has helped to turn digital currencies into this year’s best-performing asset by far.

The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index of digital coins is up about 66% in 2020, exceeding gold’s jump of more than 20% as well as returns from global stocks, bonds and commoditie­s.

A key reason for the move higher is a surge in Ethereum, which accounts for more than a third of the crypto gauge’s weight.

“Increased adoption of decentrali­sed finance, or DeFi, has driven the climb in Ethereum, which appears to be maintainin­g its platform leadership status in the sector,’’ said Mike McGlone, a strategist at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

DeFi ports financial functions onto digital ledgers called blockchain­s, allowing people to do things like lend or borrow funds and earn interest in a savings-like account without the need for traditiona­l intermedia­ries such as banks.

Its growing popularity is part of a wider trend of increased blockchain usage. Many DeFi applicatio­ns are run on the Ethereum blockchain.

DeFi collateral levels have reached $9 billion from less than $700 million at the start of the year, according to Fasset, which operates a blockchain-based marketplac­e for infrastruc­ture investment.

Aside from DeFi, proponents of digital currencies such as Bitcoin argue they offer a store of value amid concern that huge stimulus injections to counter the pandemic will stoke inflation and weaken the dollar.

Crypto markets have done well during the Covid-19 crisis partly because Bitcoin becomes a “refuge,” like gold, when risks multiply, according to Marc Fleury, chief executive officer of crypto asset management and financial technology firm Two Prime.

“A purely ethereal instrument performs well when the real economy is on pause,” he said.

Sceptics are unconvince­d, arguing crypto markets have a history of wild swings and are merely riding a tide of liquidity.

Cracks are also appearing in the hype around DeFi, suggesting it isn’t as decentrali­sed as touted.

The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index tumbled more than 8% in the three sessions through Tuesday as the pandemic hurt sentiment across a number of assets, highlighti­ng the risk of sharp moves. The gauge has retreated over 20% from an August high.

Overall, investor interest in cryptocurr­encies is broadening as derivative­s markets for Bitcoin and Ethereum expand.

DeFi led to a surge of interest in Ethereum contracts, said Aziz Zainuddin, chief product officer of Fasset, adding “retail cryptocurr­ency users have increasing­ly turned to derivative­s to maximixe their returns.”

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