The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Asian shares buoyant as Bitcoin futures rocket past US$18,000

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SYDNEY: The craze for cryptocurr­encies entered a new chapter on Monday as bitcoin futures rocketed by one-fifth of their value at a hotly anticipate­d launch, while Asian shares climbed amid optimism about global growth.

The most-traded contract on the Chicago-based CBOE Global Markets exchange XBTc1 opened at US$15,460 in New York on Sunday evening, before leaping to a high of US$18,700 – a gain of 21 per cent.

They were last quoted at US$18,100 a premium of more than US$1,700 to the price on Gemini Exchange.

The futures are cash-settled contracts based on the auction price of bitcoin in US dollars on the Gemini Exchange, which is owned and operated by virtual currency entreprene­urs Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.

The cryptocurr­ency has boasted a gravity-defying 15-fold gain since the start of the year, attracting institutio­nal interest and no small amount of question marks.

The acting governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand on Sunday said bitcoin appeared to be a “classic case” of a bubble.

“With a bubble you never know how far it is going to go before it comes around,” Grant Spencer told a local television program.

Somemarket­participan­tsbelieve the fallout across other financial assets from a potential bursting of the bubble will be limited.

“Bitcoin’s market capitaliza­tion is currently around US$240 billion, which is much smaller, say, than the value of gold outstandin­g,” said Andrew Kenningham, economist at Capital Economics.

“If the price of bitcoin fell to zero, the paper losses would be equivalent to a 0.6 per cent fall in US equity prices.

As most investors have bought bitcoin at much lower prices, the relevant losses would arguably be smaller.”

Asian shares were buoyant with every single market but one in the black, following strong U.S payrolls data and better-than-expected Chinese trade figures on Friday.

Spreadbett­ers pointed to a strong opening for European shares, while US stock futures indicated a firm start for the S&P 500 which is seen up 0.1 per cent.

The MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000P­US added 0.5 percent to 552.38, well above a recent twomonth trough of 542.27 points.

Japan’s Nikkei climbed 0.6 percent while Chinese shares rallied, with the blue-chip CSI 300 index .CSI300 up 1.3 percent.

Vietnam .VNI was the only Asian index in the red.

Currency market investors were cautious ahead of a big week for policy meetings globally, with the Federal Reserve the only major central bank expected to raise interest rates.

The Bank of England and the European Central Bank are likely to hold rates steady.

The dollar steadied near a onemonth top against the yen, after climbing 1.2 per cent last week.

Thedollari­ndex,whichmeasu­res the greenback against a basket of currencies, eased 0.1 per cent from close to a three-week high.

Traders will keep their eyes peeled for the Fed’s future rate projection­s as US wages growth and inflation crawl at a snail’s pace.

Data out on Friday showed average hourly earnings in the United States nudged up 5 cents or 0.2 per cent in November when economists had looked for a 0.3 per cent gain.

The weakness persisted despite stronger-than-expected non-farm payrolls, which rose by 228,000 in November.

“We’ll be listening close for any signs of a dovish shift,” said Aerin Williams, New York-based forex strategist for Citi about the December 12-13 Fed meeting. — Reuters

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