Botswana Guardian

Bitcoin at $ 100 000 in 2021: It’s not as far- fetched as it sounds

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Bitcoin investors, which include top hedge funds and money managers, are betting the virtual currency could more than quintuple to as high as US$ 100 000 in a year.

It’s a wager that has drawn eyerolls from sceptics who believe the volatile cryptocurr­ency is a speculativ­e asset rather than a store of value like gold.

Since January, bitcoin has gained 160 percent, bolstered by strong institutio­nal demand as well as scarcity as payment companies such as Square and PayPal buy it on behalf of customers.

I have seen bitcoin go up 10x, 20x, 30x in a year. So going up 5x is not a big deal.

Bitcoin is within sight of its all- time peak of just under $ 20 000 hit in December 2017. It debuted in 2011 at zero and was last trading at $ 18 415.

Going from $ 18 000 to $ 100 000 in one year is not a stretch, Brian Estes, chief investment officer at hedge fund Off the Chain Capital, said. “I have seen bitcoin go up 10x, 20x, 30x in a year. So going up 5x is not a big deal.”

Estes predicts bitcoin could hit between $ 100 000 and $ 288 000 by end- 2021, based on a model that utilises the stock- to- flow ratio measuring the scarcity of commoditie­s like gold. That model, he said, has a 94 percent correlatio­n with the price of bitcoin.

Citi technical analyst Tom Fitzpatric­k said in a note last week that bitcoin could climb as high as $ 318 000 by the end of next year, citing its limited supply, ease of movement across borders, and opaque ownership.

Those numbers though are a head- scratcher for Toronto- based Kevin Muir, an independen­t proprietar­y trader. “Any hedge fund model on bitcoin is rubbish. You can’t model a mania,” Muir said. “Is it plausible? For sure. It’s a mania. But does anyone actually have a clue? Not a chance.”

Bitcoin relies on so- called “mining” computers that validate blocks of transactio­ns by compe t i ng to solve mathematic­al puzzles every 10 minutes. The first to solve the puzzle and clear the transactio­n is rewarded new bitcoins.

Its technology was designed to cut the reward for miners in half every four years, a move meant to curb inflation. In May, bitcoin went through a third “halving”, which reduced the rate at which new coins are created, restrictin­g supply. That halving has kick- started bitcoin’s renewed ascent.

Square’s Cash App and PayPal, which recently launched a crypto service to its more than 300 million users, have been scooping up all new bitcoins, hedge fund Pantera Capital said in its letter to investors on Friday. That has caused a bitcoin shortage and has driven the rally in the last few weeks.

The so- called whale index, which counts address es or wallets holding at least a thousand bitcoins, is at an alltime high, said Phil Bonello, research director at digital asset manager Grayscale. Bonello said more than 2 200 addresses were linked to large bitcoin holders, up 37 percent from 1 600 in 2018, suggesting that institutio­nal money has stormed in. Government­s around the world won’t let that happen. They will not let fiat currencies collapse just like that

Investors l ike Stanl ey Druckenmil­ler, founder of hedge fund Duquesne Capital, and Rick Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed income, have recently touted bitcoin.

Retail investors though are still mostly sidelined due to the pandemic’s effect on the economy. But with the entry of Square and PayPal, Lennard Neo, head of research at crypto index fund provider Stack Funds, expects a deluge of retail demand more intense than in 2017.

Neo forecasts bitcoin to reach $ 60 000 to $ 80 000 by the end of 2021.

Tempus currency trader Juan Perez was unimpresse­d, even shocked, with all the lofty forecasts and said a bet on bitcoin at $ 100 000 next year would be a bet on the collapse of the global financial system.

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