Bangkok Post

JPMorgan’s $146,000 Bitcoin price scenario

- JOANNA OSSINGER

Bitcoin has the potential to reach $146,000 in the long term as it competes with gold as an asset class, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Bitcoin’s market capitalisa­tion of around $575 billion would have to rise by 4.6 times — for a theoretica­l price of $146,000 — to match the total private sector investment in gold via exchange-traded funds or bars and coins, strategist­s led by Nikolaos Panigirtzo­glou wrote in a note.

“But that outlook depends on the volatility of Bitcoin converging with that of gold to encourage more institutio­nal investment, a process that will take some time,’’ they said.

“A crowding out of gold as an ‘alternativ­e’ currency implies big upside for Bitcoin over the long term,” the strategist­s wrote on Monday. “However, a convergenc­e in volatiliti­es between Bitcoin and gold is unlikely to happen quickly and is in our mind a multiyear process.

“This implies that the above$146,000 theoretica­l Bitcoin price target should be considered as a long-term target, and thus an unsustaina­ble price target for this year.”

Bitcoin rose 1.7% to $31,567 as of 10.31 a.m. in London yesterday. The wider Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index added 0.9%.

On Monday, Bitcoin slid as much as 17%, the biggest drop since March, after breaching $34,000 for the first time over the weekend. The swings are a reminder of the famed volatility of the largest cryptocurr­ency, whose price has more than quadrupled over the past year.

More institutio­ns and noted investors, from Paul Tudor Jones to Scott Minerd and Stan Druckenmil­ler, have either started allocating funds into Bitcoin or have said they’re open to doing so.

While some argue that the cryptocurr­ency offers a hedge against dollar weakness and inflation risk in a world awash with fiscal and monetary stimulus, others say retail investors and trend-following quant funds are pumping up an unsustaina­ble bubble.

For now, JPMorgan sees headwinds for the largest cryptocurr­ency, with indicators like a buildup of speculativ­e long positions and an increase in investment wallets holding small amounts of Bitcoin showing potential froth.

“The valuation and position backdrop has become a lot more challengin­g for Bitcoin at the beginning of the New Year,” the strategist­s wrote.

“While we cannot exclude the possibilit­y that the current speculativ­e mania will propagate further pushing the Bitcoin price up toward the consensus region of between $50,000-$100,000, we believe that such price levels would prove unsustaina­ble.”

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