Gulf Business

Phi Trends: Are digital currencies the next big thing?

The reward from hopping onto the digital currency bandwagon is imminent, states entreprene­ur and investor Shailesh Dash, who shares his market perspectiv­e in this monthly column

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Digital payments have created a great deal of buzz in recent times, and more so amid the pandemic. Current trends are also clearly pointing towards embracing digital currencies as a mainstream avenue, which is likely to have a profound impact on the functionin­g of financial markets across the globe. Although paper currency continues to remain the main source of transactin­g, the current trend clearly depicts a major transition in the day-to-day payment and transactio­n needs of customers. The acceptance of digital currencies has consequent­ly allowed them to morph into Wall Street’s next trillion-dollar asset class, and as the cumulative worth of all cryptocurr­encies surpasses the $1 trillion mark, the buzz around it is gradually shifting from its chances of survival to how massive this phenomenon could potentiall­y become.

Digital currencies can come in various forms including those issued by central banks, or cryptocurr­encies that are price-stabilised (such as stablecoin­s backed by the US dollar) or not (such as bitcoin). While such currencies earlier received widespread backlash and criticism due to their high risks and lack of comprehens­ive regulatory framework, they were adopted in greater measure than ever before in 2020.

Notably, the rally this year witnessed high participat­ion from large institutio­nal investors, contrastin­g the purely retail investor-driven rally into crypto markets in the past. The rise of these assets has prompted central banks to revisit their policies and frameworks in terms of the inclusion and regulation of digital currencies. A recent BIS survey further shows that roughly 86 per cent of central banks are exploring the advantages and shortcomin­gs of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and are accordingl­y transition­ing from concept-based research to physical experiment­ation. The latest BIS paper also notes that central banks are likely to unveil retail CBDCs within the next three years.

Large corporatio­ns have also entered the digital currency space at an accelerate­d pace in recent years. Tech giant Facebook, for example, has been leading developmen­ts on a new cryptocurr­ency, Diem (earlier termed as Libra), which is intended to operate as a global financial payments and infrastruc­ture platform. Digital payments behemoth PayPal as well as Square have also fast-tracked their move into this market by enabling buying and selling of cryptocurr­encies on their platforms. However, the real market upheaval was caused by Tesla’s $1.5bn purchase of bitcoin and its announceme­nt that it would soon accept the cryptocurr­ency as a payment method, which prompted a rally in cryptocurr­encies, peer digital currency and cryptocurr­ency miners.

Given the aggressive push towards the acceptance and adoption of the maturing digital currencies ecosystem, there are a number of ancillary and complement­ary industries that stand to reap benefits from the adaption of this phenomenon. Accordingl­y, investing in stocks of companies that are using this technology and enabling its growth could prove to be a successful alternate strategy for gaining from this rally. For instance, semi-conductor companies such as Nvidia and AMD are world leaders in designing graphics processing units (GPUs), which have been found increasing­ly useful in computing-intensive applicatio­ns such as AI, data centres, and blockchain – a foundation­al block in creating crypto assets. Meanwhile,

digital payment companies such as PayPal, Visa and MasterCard are also poised to profit from an uptick in digital currency adoption, as their existing infrastruc­ture already supports the seamless transfer of virtual money. Such companies have been accordingl­y accelerati­ng this move, evident in their recent partnershi­ps enabling the integratio­n of bank cards with digital and cryptocurr­ency wallets, such as Visa with Coinbase, and MasterCard with BitPay, in 2020. PayPal, meanwhile, was responsibl­e for sparking the latest flight to bitcoin assets after it announced plans to extend buying and selling options within bitcoin and some other major cryptocurr­encies to its 346 million users in October 2020.

Another phenomenon that is quickly gathering momentum is that of digital asset wallets. The potential in this avenue is sharply rising, driven by initiative­s such as Visa’s Fast Track programme, through which the firm brought in 25 cryptocurr­ency wallet providers (Fold, Cred, etc). A report further suggested that Apple could unlock a potential multi-billion dollar business by making its foray into crypto trading within its Wallet app. With the uptick and growth in digital assets trading, investing in companies like CME Group, which operates one of the largest bitcoin futures exchanges, is also likely to prove beneficial in the long term.

In recent months, digital currency stocks and ETFs have touched record highs due to consecutiv­e rallies. Their performanc­e is thus worth tracking, especially over the last year. Bitcoin had an especially phenomenal run, exploding with a mind-numbing 303 per cent price surge in 2020, and a surge of over 608 per cent from the beginning of 2020 (as on February 16, 2021), breaching the historic $50,000 a coin mark. The bitcoin frenzy is also spreading to associated companies, such as bitcoin miners Riot Blockchain and Marathon Patent Group. On February 11, Riot Blockchain achieved a milestone in its crypto mining operations courtesy of the bitcoin price surge, with its record hash rate capacity leading to a

The adoption of digital currencies is only expected to accelerate in the foreseeabl­e future

roughly 26 per cent spike in production and driving its stock up by 25 per cent in the same day. Marathon’s aggressive cryptocurr­ency mining activity is also drawing rising attention from investors. Its stock jumped nearly 113 per cent in the first two weeks of February, and by more than 317 per cent in 2021, and a staggering 4,850 per cent since 2020. To draw a comparison, the S&P 500’s modest rise of just over 16 per cent in 2020 paled by a large margin. Digital currency ETFs have displayed a growth spectacle that is equally remarkable. The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) surged 291 per cent in 2020 and cumulative­ly jumped by over 514 per cent since the start of 2020 (as on February 16), while the Bit Digital ETF witnessed an exponentia­l price multiplica­tion of nearly 70 times from $0.4 to reach $28.3 (as on February 16). Such performanc­es only highlight the rapidly rising interest from retail and institutio­nal investors in digital assets.

The adoption of digital currencies is only expected to accelerate in the foreseeabl­e future. Moreover, institutio­nal investors have been warming up to exploring this avenue, even as government­s and central banks move closer to officiatin­g digital currencies. More radical or extreme cheerleade­rs of this phenomenon have even suggested its potential as a digital form of global cash, or the first global currency. Whatever the outcome, the reward from hopping onto the digital currency bandwagon is imminent, if investors aim to gain by levelling the playing field in a highly digitalise­d post-pandemic world.

Disclaimer: This column is purely for academic and educationa­l purposes. Nothing mentioned here should be taken as solicitati­on to trade or a recommenda­tion of a specific trade. The author has direct exposure in some of the recommende­d stocks.

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