The Scotsman

Further adventures into land of cryptocurr­ency

- Comment Jim Duffy

As I get older, I get less resilient to sudden surprises or events that don’t compute well in my head. I’ve noticed this even more recently as lockdown has calmed my life down to walks, work and studying macroecono­mics. So, the festive period caused some short, sharp shocks as I watched the whole cryptocurr­ency markets quite literally undergo massive change. Of course, all led by Bitcoin.

To properly contextual­ise why I felt giddy as a schoolboy, we have to look at the dollar price of Bitcoin mid-december. Standing at $18,000 (£13,240), I felt that this new “store of value” had performed very well over the year from lows in March of around $3,000. The rhetoric on Bitcoin had changed from payment vehicle to “digital gold”.

That was not enough for the crypto markets, though. By Christmas Day, Bitcoin had climbed to almost $25,000. And the communicat­ion traffic on all social media platforms had also gone parabolic. This was not sustainabl­e and a big correction was due soon. But by January 3 Bitcoin had soared to $33,000. Nuts, right? I woke up and looked at my portfolio and almost called Savills to buy a Scottish castle, a Lambo and a Greek island. I jest, of course. But, in my mind, I knew that this paradigm shift in value would be short-lived.

A small correction has come, but a mere $3,000. As I write this piece the price of Bitcoin is $31,000. And by the time you read this, that could have a Fibonacci move to the upside or downside by another $3,000. And, that folks, is what we need to expect over the next six months. The whole cryptocurr­ency narrative is being shaped by a number of impacts.

America is now awash with big institutio­ns and media outlets tuning into and readying themselves for the “wall of money” that is forecasted to hit this red-hot digital stock market. In fact, the changes within the last 12 months have been game-changing. American banks can legally custody Bitcoin and crypto.

Banks like JP Morgan who vilified crypto a year ago are now making bold forecasts on its future value in hundreds of thousands of dollars. New venture funds are opening up to high-net-worth investors. Only this week, Anthony Scaramucci’s firm Skybridge Capital launched a Bitcoin fund, already boasting $310 million in value.

Mr Scaramucci was, at one time, an advisor to Donald Trump. That didn’t last long and he is is now back in finance. And these are just two examples of how America is shaping up for the coming of age of crypto. Many more exist and are in the pipeline.

So I’m going to have to be ready for more sudden surprises. And if you enter this market, you will need “strong hands”. I forecast that the next six months will either make or break Bitcoin and crypto markets. Paypal, Square and Coinbase are big players who will make it easy to buy crypto . Fidelity, Grayscale and others will cater for the wealthy. While new entrants like Scotlandba­sed Zumo will also offer ease of buying. But, when serious money from corporate America gears up to enter the space, expect sudden price rises and correction­s, with a few palpitatio­ns.

This will not be a case of a financial advisor getting you 8 per cent net a year on your investment­s. No, it will be violent, and at times chaotic with 20 per cent rises and dumps – all within 30-minute timeframes. My advice for anyone considerin­g Bitcoin or other crypto is do your own homework, read, read and read some more.

This column will be all over the story for you this year. It will be an adventure!

•Jim Duffy, MBE, Create Special

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 ??  ?? 0 Next six months will make or break crypto
0 Next six months will make or break crypto

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