National Post

Bitcoin’s appeal spreads beyond geeks, anarchists

INVESTORS, BIG AND SMALL, PILE IN

- EVA SZALAY

aflood of central bank stimulus and widening interest among retail and institutio­nal investors has sustained the rally in cryptocurr­encies, analysts say, even as skeptics warn that the market is in the midst of a bubble.

bitcoin kicked off February at just above us$36,000, about us$5,000 beneath the record peak it hit last month.

The digital currency briefly wobbled after reaching the high in early January, but has so far avoided a repeat of the brutal crash in 2017. Some investors put that down to a deluge of central bank stimulus, which has inflated the price of assets globally and triggered a frantic hunt for returns.

“The amount of liquidity that has been injected in the system has found its way into a lot of different assets, including alternativ­es such as bitcoin,” said Francesca Fornasari, a fund manager at Insight Investment.

At the same time, profession­al and amateur investors are beginning to play a more active role in the crypto market.

“In 2012 it was mostly geeks, anarchists and libertaria­ns in crypto,” said Marc bernegger, a Zurich-based board member of Crypto Finance Group, a broker and asset manager. “The profile of people entering into bitcoin has definitely changed.”

Many remain skeptical, however, and worry that the sharp price rises reflect increasing­ly frothy market conditions. For them, bitcoin’s gains echo the recent volatility in share prices of companies like Gamestop Corp. and AMC entertainm­ent Holdings, as well as a sudden surge this week in the price of silver.

The moves in all three markets involved an influx of retail traders, armed with increasing­ly sophistica­ted tools and often stuck at home because of coronaviru­s lockdowns. Some brokerages such as robinhood allow traders to bet both on the price of stocks and cryptocurr­encies.

Since a sharp fall during the broad market ructions last March, bitcoin’s value has increased by nine times. The boom has caused parts of the traditiona­l financial community to take notice, with some banks beginning to cover the market as part of their research offerings.

San Francisco-based Coinbase is preparing for a direct listing that would give investors their first chance to buy shares in a big u.s.-listed cryptocurr­ency exchange.

The planned debut comes as investors are already chasing other proxies for investing in digital tokens without having to hold them outright. Last year, investors poured us$5.7-billion into cryptocurr­ency trusts managed by Grayscale, the favoured investment channel of many traditiona­l traders dipping their toes into bitcoin. The figure amounted to more than four times the total net inflows between 2013 and 2019. Most of Grayscale’s inflows come from institutio­nal investors.

data from Chain-alysis, a specialist cryptocurr­ency analytics company, also show an increase in institutio­ns’ purchases of bitcoin, and a rise in average transactio­n sizes since November.

Joshua younger, a strategist at Jpmorgan, said the size of the bitcoin market had grown to equal about a fifth of gold held for investment and trading purposes, with a market capitaliza­tion for the cryptocurr­ency of us$750 billion at its peak earlier this year, meaning it “is far from a niche asset class.”

The lure of the high-risk space is increasing­ly difficult to ignore. “you’re not buying bitcoin to make 20 per cent, you’re buying it to make exponentia­l returns,” said brett Messing, a partner and chief operating officer of cryptocurr­ency specialist hedge fund Skybridge Capital.

Analysts at Canadian insurance company Manulife said in late January that the expansion in central banks’ balance sheets and rising public debt would push investors further into alternativ­e asset classes, which could turn cryptocurr­encies into “a solution to investor fears that ongoing extraordin­ary policy support could lead to resource misallocat­ion.”

“This doesn’t necessaril­y imply that investment­s in cryptocurr­encies are appropriat­e, but it does suggest that cryptoasse­ts such as bitcoin will increasing­ly become a standard point of reference for investors and policy-makers alike,” Manulife said.

but scams and hacks also remain rife, with a recent report from data company Xangle showing that investors have lost more than us$16 billion to fraud since 2012. regulators are also increasing­ly concerned about the size of the market and the unchecked activity taking place every day.

Agustín Carstens, the head of the bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s said last week that “it is clear that bitcoin is more of a speculativ­e asset than money.”

Michael bolliger, chief investment officer at ubs Wealth Management, added that the history of bubbles showed that they could stay inflated for longer than most expected, sometimes without bursting.

“Changes in the way assets are perceived can also mean that bubbles may never fully deflate, and this could hold true for cryptocurr­encies, too,” bolliger said.

IT IS CLEAR THAT BITCOIN IS MORE OF A SPECULATIV­E ASSET THAN MONEY.

 ?? Peter J. THOMPSON / FINANCIAL POST FILES ?? “You’re not buying Bitcoin to make 20 per cent, you’re buying it to make exponentia­l returns,” said Brett Messing at cryptocurr­ency specialist hedge fund Skybridge Capital.
Peter J. THOMPSON / FINANCIAL POST FILES “You’re not buying Bitcoin to make 20 per cent, you’re buying it to make exponentia­l returns,” said Brett Messing at cryptocurr­ency specialist hedge fund Skybridge Capital.
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