San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BITCOIN HITS $1 TRILLION VALUE AS CRYPTO JUMP TOPS OTHER ASSETS

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

Bitcoin’s market value reached $1 trillion for the first time, a surge that’s helping cryptocurr­ency returns far outstrip the performanc­e of more traditiona­l assets like stocks and gold.

The largest token has added more than $450 billion of value in 2021 to about $1 trillion, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index, which includes Bitcoin and four other coins, has more than doubled.

Speculator­s, corporate treasurers and institutio­nal investors are thought to have stoked Bitcoin’s volatile ascent. Crypto believers are dueling with skeptics for the dominant narrative around the climb: the former see an asset being embraced for its ability to hedge risks such as inflation, while the latter sense a precarious mania riding atop waves of monetary and fiscal stimulus.

At the same time, the argument has been made that assigning a market capitaliza­tion isn’t an accurate representa­tion since Bitcoin isn’t a company or even an asset. Skeptics say without real-work assets that companies possess or government backing like the dollar, all investors are really buying into is faith in the cryptocurr­ency’s network.

Still, FOMO — fear of missing out — may be at play, said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy with AMP Capital Investors Ltd. in Sydney, adding that “in times of easy money this gets magnified and it’s partly what’s driving the current interest.”

The crypto index’s performanc­e towers over stocks, gold, commoditie­s and bonds in 2021.

This month, Tesla disclosed a $1.5 billion investment and Microstrat­egy Inc. boosted a sale of convertibl­e bonds to $900 million to buy even more of the token. That brought the coin closer to corporate America.

“If companies’ fundamenta­ls are going to become closely tied to movements in Bitcoin because they’ve suddenly become speculator­s on the side, we’re going to be in bubble territory before you know it,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst with Oanda Europe Ltd.

Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk posted a cryptic tweet Friday that appeared in part to defend the company’s action, saying Bitcoin “is simply a less dumb form of liquidity than cash” while adding that the electric vehicle maker’s decision isn’t “directly reflective of my opinion.”

The “long Bitcoin” trade is seen as among the most crowded in the world alongside technology exposure and dollar shorts, according to the February edition of Bank of America’s global fund manager survey.

AMP’S Oliver said if Bitcoin “falls out of favor — for example due to government regulation or investors just moving on to the next new thing — then it could quickly plunge.”

 ?? LARS HAGBERG AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A technician inspects the backside of Bitcoin mining at Bitfarms in Saint Hyacinthe, Quebec. The cryptocurr­ency’s market value is soaring.
LARS HAGBERG AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A technician inspects the backside of Bitcoin mining at Bitfarms in Saint Hyacinthe, Quebec. The cryptocurr­ency’s market value is soaring.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States