Cape Times

Bitcoin debated on Wall Street

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BITCOIN has shot to a record just as billions of institutio­nal dollars have fled gold. Whether that's a simple coincidenc­e or the start of a rotation that would have a profound impact on crypto and the precious-metals market is impossible to know for sure. But the debate is now heating up on whether the world's largest digital currency can one day rival bullion as an inflation hedge and portfolio diversifie­r.

Bitcoin's tumble last week, the biggest since March, after a 150% run-up this year underscore­s the famous volatility of the asset class that has kept mainstream investors at bay.

Yet if they start moving just a small portion of their gold holdings into the $350 billion Bitcoin industry, it would be a game-changer for diversific­ation strategies on Wall Street.

“Gold was really the safe asset of the past world and baby boomer generation,” said Jean-Marc Bonnefous, a former commoditie­s hedge fund manager turned crypto investor. “Now it's being replaced by automated assets like Bitcoin.”

The digital currency is a trading ground for a motley crew of retail players, while traditiona­l investors have stayed on the sidelines. That seems to be changing with Guggenheim Partners LLC just the latest manager to join the bandwagon, alongside Paul Tudor Jones and Stan Druckenmil­ler. Funds

like family offices are selling their gold exchange-traded funds holdings for the digital currency, according to analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. Bullion-backed funds have dropped 93 tons of metal, worth some $5 billion since November 6.

Bitcoin's market capitalisa­tion is now only 3.1% the size of gold, says James Butterfill, investment strategist at CoinShares, which sells investment­s in digital currencies. If that increased to 5%, it would imply a price of $31 300 compared to around $19 500, he estimated. “Bitcoin is establishi­ng itself as a credible store of value," Butterfill said. “This is particular­ly appealing during this time of unpreceden­ted loose monetary policy.”

Still, there are good reasons for bullion's poor performanc­e recently, like progress toward a Covid-19 vaccine that has reduced demand for havens. With market-derived inflation expectatio­ns relatively stable, one conclusion might be that gold is simply moving along with animal spirits, while Bitcoin has been in a speculativ­e fervour.

The latter has also found a fan at the world's largest asset manager – evidence of its growing appeal on Wall Street. The currency is “here to stay”, backed by demand among millennial­s, BlackRock Chief Investment Officer for Fixed Income Rick Rieder said.

One of the difference­s between the two is that all transactio­ns can be viewed on the blockchain, while a large part of gold trade takes place on London's over-the-counter market, where less data is available. “The transparen­cy in Bitcoin is helping drive a lot of interest,” said Lyle Pratt, an independen­t investor who owns Bitcoin. “Gold is kind of like a blackbox, you have to trust the custodians to tell you about any flows in the market.”

For Plurimi Wealth's Chief Investment Officer Patrick Armstrong, even if Bitcoin has potentiall­y bigger upside in an inflationa­ry spiral, the risks are too big. Gold also has a long history as a store of value that Bitcoin can't match. There's always the fear that another, central-bank backed, digital currency could supplant it.

 ?? | EPA ?? COMPUTERS at a crypto currency mining centre in Leningrad, Russia..
| EPA COMPUTERS at a crypto currency mining centre in Leningrad, Russia..

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