San Francisco Chronicle

Bitcoin sets a record, with less talk of a bubble

- By Nathaniel Popper

Bitcoin is back. Again. Nearly three years after it went on a hairbendin­g rise and hit a peak of $ 19,783, the price of a single bitcoin rose above that for the first time this week, according to data and news provider CoinDesk. The cryptocurr­ency has soared since March, after sinking below $ 4,000 at the outset of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Bitcoin’s latest climb is different from its last spike in 2017, which was driven largely by investors in Asia who had just learned about cryptocurr­ency. Back then, the digital token soon lost momentum as people questioned what it could do other than allow for easy online speculatin­g and drug and ransom payments.

While those questions remain, bitcoin is now being fueled by a less speculativ­e fever. Buyers — led by American investors, including companies and other traditiona­l investors — are treating bitcoin as an alternativ­e asset, somewhat like gold, according to an analysis from data firm Chainalysi­s. Rather than quickly trading in and out of it, more investors are using bitcoin as a place to park part of their investment portfolios outside the influence of government­s and the traditiona­l financial system, Chainalysi­s and other industry firms said.

“It’s a very different set of people who are buying bitcoin recently,” said Philip Gradwell, chief economist at Chainalysi­s, which analyzes the movement of cryptocurr­encies. “They are doing it in steadier amounts over sustained periods of time, and they are taking it off exchanges and holding it as an investment.”

The excitement has been underpinne­d by regulators and mainstream financial companies that are trying to make cryptocurr­encies safer and more accessible. The Office of the Comptrolle­r of the

Currency, a U. S. regulator, said this summer that banks would be allowed to hold cryptocurr­encies for customers. And PayPal announced in October that it would follow its rival Square and allow people to buy and hold bitcoin and a few other cryptocurr­encies.

“Our move came as a result of conversati­ons with government officials, and then seeing the dramatic shift into digital payments as a result of the pandemic,” Dan Schulman, chief executive of PayPal, said in an interview. More than 1 million people — three to four times what the company expected — joined a wait list to use cryptocurr­encies before the feature was started, he said.

Bitcoin’s rise is part of a broader exuberance in cryptocurr­encies and stock markets, which are defying the gloom of a pandemicin­duced recession. The Dow, S& P 500 and Nasdaq have hit record highs recently, with Wall Street buoyed by the presidenti­al election and the news of potential coronaviru­s vaccines.

Bitcoin is a digital currency with software and rules that were released in early 2009 by a shadowy creator with the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. The computer code establishe­d that the total supply of bitcoin would be limited. Only 21 million tokens will ever be created, distribute­d in small blocks each day — through a process known as mining — to some of the computers that maintain the currency’s online infrastruc­ture.

Like gold, bitcoin can be created, moved and stored outside the purview of any government or financial institutio­n. Bitcoins exist on a financial ledger, known as a blockchain, which is maintained and updated by a volunteer network of people running thousands of computers worldwide — a system meant to ensure that no one computer or institutio­n can change the rules or control the network.

The open nature of the system — and the fact that anyone can join it and create a wallet without providing so much as a name or a phone number — has made it popular for those who want to circumvent the traditiona­l financial system. They have included terrorists, drug dealers and countries, like North Korea, Venezuela and Iran, that want to evade U. S. financial sanctions.

“This technology already plays a role in many of the most significan­t criminal and national security threats our nation faces,” the Department of Justice said in a report in October. The report described how deeply bitcoin had been woven into the infrastruc­ture of the criminal world.

But bitcoin’s stateless nature has also won over investors interested in legitimate uses of the technology. Some have been motivated by a libertaria­n distrust of government­s. Others who are less ideologica­l have gravitated to Bitcoin as an alternativ­e to the financial system.

But bitcoin is not backed by anything other than its computer network and the faith of people who buy it and give it value on exchanges. Many of these people are betting that someone else will be willing to pay them more for their bitcoin in the future.

That has made bitcoin prices volatile. It fell to its most recent low in March when fear over the pandemic hit global markets. Soon after, though, investors began talking about bitcoin as a beneficiar­y of the global downturn.

In May, Paul Tudor Jones, one of Wall Street’s bestknown hedge fund managers, said he had put almost 2% of his portfolio in bitcoin. He said the cap on bitcoin production made it an attractive alternativ­e to the declining value of traditiona­l currencies, which he thought was inevitable as central banks printed more money to encourage an economic recovery.

“Every day that goes by that bitcoin survives, the trust in it will go up,” Jones told CNBC at the time. He did not respond to a request for comment for this article.

Some public companies also dived into bitcoin because of concerns about the value of the dollar. In August, MicroStrat­egy, a software company in Virginia, said it bought $ 250 million of bitcoin to store some of the cash it had in the corporate treasury.

Michael Saylor, MicroStrat­egy’s CEO, said in an interview that after knowing almost nothing about bitcoin at the beginning of this year, he had become a believer in how the hardcoded limit on the number of tokens would help it hold its value over time. He became so enthusiast­ic that he put $ 175 million of his own money into the currency. MicroStrat­egy later bought another $ 175 million of bitcoin.

“For anything that anybody invested in as a store of value, it starts to look like it is better to move that into Bitcoin,” Saylor said.

In October, San Francisco’s Square said it was putting $ 50 million of its corporate cash into bitcoin. In 2018, Square also began offering the digital currency on the Cash App, its phone app that people use to send money between friends and family. The company, which is led by Jack Dorsey, who is also CEO of Twitter, said in early November that its customers held $ 1.8 billion of bitcoin, up 180% from a year ago.

In October, analysts at JPMorgan Chase wrote a widely circulated note about how using bitcoin as an alternativ­e to gold — especially by younger investors — was creating a significan­t market for the tokens. Given that the total value of all outstandin­g bitcoin, around $ 350 billion, was a small fraction of all the gold in the world, the analysts said they could see the value of bitcoin going much higher.

Bitcoin’s rally has been accompanie­d by a broader bull market in cryptocurr­encies, just as in 2017. While much of the fervor three years ago centered on new coins from scammy socalled initial coin offerings, interest has shifted to coins trying to take part in what is known as decentrali­zed finance. These systems, which remain buggy and unproven, aim to make it possible to take out loans and insurance or collect interest without involving any financial institutio­ns.

Central banks from countries such as Singapore, Sweden and the Bahamas are also looking at creating national digital currencies, inspired partly by bitcoin. The biggest project, from China’s central bank, appears to be the furthest along.

The national coins, which would leave behind the volatility of bitcoin, could make cryptocurr­encies obsolete. But they could also make it easier to move in and out of digital currencies of all kinds.

Given the uncertaint­y around bitcoin’s value, any excitement is likely to be followed by another contractio­n. But the number of crashes bitcoin has survived is changing the conversati­on around the technology.

“Now it’s LeBron James playing at age 21 and starting to dominate the court,” Saylor said. “It’s not LeBron James, age 13, throwing a temper tantrum. You’ve got a hardening and a maturing of the asset.”

 ?? Ozan Kose / AFP via Getty Images ?? This physical imitation of bitcoin is at a cryptocurr­ency “Bitcoin Change” shop near the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul.
Ozan Kose / AFP via Getty Images This physical imitation of bitcoin is at a cryptocurr­ency “Bitcoin Change” shop near the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul.

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