The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

There are two sides to every Bitcoiner

Speculator­s who missed rally express relief, regret

- ANNA IRRERA

LONDON — Arianna O'dell, a 30-year-old entreprene­ur and songwriter based in New York City, had a tumultuous four-year journey in cryptocurr­ency before selling her investment­s in February.

During her rollercoas­ter ride, bitcoin prices swung from under $1,000 to nearly $20,000 (all figures in U.S. dollars). O'dell may not have made optimal decisions about when to buy or sell and missed out on the recent rally but says she doesn't regret that.

Investing $2,705 worth of proceeds into her business was better than enduring the stress of daily fluctuatio­ns, even though the price has since doubled, she said.

"Honestly, I've had more luck in Vegas than I've had with cryptocurr­encies," O'dell said in an interview.

She is part of a relatively new class of retail investors who joined the crypto market years ago, helping propel bitcoin's price to a high of nearly $20,000. Not willing to stomach the subsequent volatility and having lost hope in a recovery, many cashed out and are missing the latest bonanza.

Bitcoin has gained around 160 per cent this year and was edging closer to it's all time high of around $19,666, hit in December 2017.

Yet those amateur investors who have been a big part of the market, sharing advice on social media and investment forums, are not fuelling the surge, crypto experts told Reuters.

"This rally is largely driven by institutio­nal buy-in," said Tim Ogilvie, CEO of Staked, which provides institutio­ns with infrastruc­ture services for crypto assets.

He pointed to hedge fund managers like Paul Tudor Jones and Stanley Druckenmil­ler including bitcoin in their broad investment strategies.

Like O'dell, however, several retail investors who had money on the line during prior bitcoin whipsaws expressed the same emotion about having divested: relief.

Akram Tariq Khan, an entreprene­ur in New Delhi, got into bitcoin in 2017 with assets totalling $160,000 at their peak. But the 25-year-old got spooked as the price dove by almost 50 per cent and sold. In all, he has lost about $10,000 in capital.

"In retrospect, holding seems like the right decision, but when you've bought something at a much higher price and you see the price going down the drain there is a psychologi­cal impact," said Khan, co-founder of e-commerce company Yourlibaas.

"Bitcoin could have gone to $1,000 and never come back."

‘ZERO EXPECTED RETURN’

Investing in cryptocurr­encies is like playing roulette, some experts say, because no-one really understand­s what's happening. Unlike stocks or bonds, where business trends or central bank decisions can affect prices, crypto values remain an enigma.

Analysts rarely pinpoint causes when prices suddenly crash, or stall for years. Even big fish are baffled. Billionair­e Masayoshi Son, CEO of Japan's Softbank, spoke for many in profession­al investing last week when he described how he had no regrets at missing out on the latest rally, having sold out in 2018 for a loss of around $50 million.

"Today it's maybe more than the price that I sold, but I feel so much better because at least I don't have to put my mind in something I don't understand," he told a New York Times event.

Michael Edesess, an adjunct associate professor at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, described bitcoin as "a not very rational investment.”

"To a mathematic­ian and economist like myself, bitcoin offers a zero expected return – that is, the odds it will go up or down by the same amount, are equal," he said.

Some small investors did hold onto their bitcoin, adopting the HODL mantra, which stemmed from a 2013 post where a user misspelled his intent to keep "hodling" bitcoin instead of "holding" it.

But others were just looking for a quick buck and bought near the top of the market.

"They'll come in after their idiot nephew who still lives in their sister's basement makes $100,000," said cryptocurr­ency consultant Colin Platt.

‘TALK OF CRASH COMING’

It is impossible to know the exact breakdown between retail and profession­al investors because transactio­ns are anonymous, and exchanges do not share detailed informatio­n about users.

Many crypto experts say, though, that institutio­nal investors have played a bigger role than this year than in the past. They cite demand for riskier assets amid unpreceden­ted stimulus programs to counter COVID-19 and expectatio­ns bitcoin will win wider acceptance as a method of payment.

They also point to improvemen­ts in market structure having attracted bigger investors, as well as significan­tly fewer Google searches for the term "bitcoin," which typically increase alongside amateur involvemen­t.

However, some experts also say a new wave of retail participat­ion may be ahead, since Main Street investors typically amp up participat­ion at the height of a bubble.

For instance, Livi Morris, a London-based musician, saw her cryptocurr­ency portfolio lose 70-80 per cent soon after buying into the sector in January 2018. She held onto the assets until June this year, when values were a fraction of the prices she paid.

Morris expressed regret about selling too early but has started buying crypto again in recent weeks after reading that bigger companies have entered the market. She's focused on smaller virtual coins, hoping this time will be different.

"When I invested in 2017 there was a lot of talk of a crash coming," she said.

"It feels like times have changed."

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