Loading...
The Financial Express

Bitcoin soars toward $50K


Bitcoin soars toward $50K

Bitcoin powered to a record high on Tuesday, approaching the $50,000 mark, basking in the afterglow of Elon Musk-led Tesla’s investment in the cryptocurrency that had investors believing it may become a mainstream asset class.

The most popular cryptocurrency has gained 1,150 per cent since its March 2020 lows, as institutional investors searched for alternative investments and retail traders rode the wave. It traded at a few hundred dollars only five years earlier.

Glassnode, which provides insight on blockchain data, said in its latest report that bitcoin’s limited supply suggested further gains for the virtual asset.

Bitcoin’s liquid supply is continuing to decrease, as investors increasingly acquire and “hodl” the asset for the long term. “Hodl” is crypto slang for the act of an investor holding the asset instead of selling it, reports Reuters.

Currently, around 78 per cent of issued bitcoin are either lost or being “hodled.” This leaves less than four million bitcoins to be shared among future market entrants - including large institutional investors such as PayPal, Square, S&P 500 companies, and exchange traded funds, Glassnode said.

On Monday, bitcoin leapt 20 per cent after Tesla announced it had a $1.5 billion investment and that it would eventually take the cryptocurrency as payment for its cars. That was its largest daily rise in more than three years.

It climbed to a peak of $48,216.09 - almost enough to buy one of the best-selling Tesla vehicles, the Tesla Model Y SUV. Rival cryptocurrency ethereum struck a record high of $1,825.36 on Tuesday.

Musk’s foreseeing acceptance of the currency as payment for Tesla cars has analysts reckoning this is a large shift as companies and big investment houses follow small traders into the asset.

Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex, remains unconvinced and said bitcoin remains a speculative vehicle.

“The fact that it draws some institutional investors or even some companies does not change this fact. Bitcoin has no earnings stream that can be modeled,” said Chandler. “It has no break-up or replacement cost. There is no intrinsic value. They have no use-value the way economists understand it.”

Bitcoin’s volatility has also been a hindrance for some serious investors and a sticking point in using it for transactions. Realised volatility, or daily price swings measured in terms of closing prices for bitcoin over the past 90 days, was at 72 per cent, compared with 16 per cent for the S&P 500 stocks index and 6 per cent for the euro currency.

What’s more, with bitcoin’s value tripling in the past three months, analysts raised questions over how its volatility would affect someone buying a Tesla car in bitcoin.

“Unless the price of bitcoin stabilises, either bitcoin’s price falls drastically and you end up having won a Tesla in a lottery, or its price triples and you end up paying your Tesla far too expensive,” said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.

“EARLIEST PHASES”

Billionaire Musk has long been a cryptocurrency fan - he has talked them up online - but Tesla’s hard currency investment came as a surprise that has put a rocket under the sector.

“Right now, it still seems like a bit of a leisurely pursuit, to acquire bitcoin. But I think by the end of the year, with the current rate of institutional flow inbound, it will become clear that this is a once-in-a-lifetime landgrab,” said Jehan Chu, founder and managing partner at Kenetic, which invests in blockchain-related companies.

Still, in BofA’s January fund manager survey, bitcoin topped the list of “most crowded” trades. Another survey, by Deutsche Bank, warned of price bubbles in the cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin is already up 67 per cent this year, on top of a 300 per cent rally last year, as investors search for alternatives to the dollar because of the US Federal Reserve’s 0 per cent interest rates. The dollar slid against most currencies on Tuesday.

In the ongoing digital wave, central bankers and regulators, particularly in China, are also starting to embrace issuing their own digital currencies for everyday use, in a major break from the conventional workings of global finance.

Beijing will issue 10 million yuan ($1.55 million) worth of digital currency to residents that can be used during the Lunar New Year holiday starting on Thursday, domestic media reported.

However, Vitor Constancio, former vice-president of the European Central Bank, wrote on Twitter that policymakers should focus on regulating cryptocurrencies and develop digital currencies only if they will help banks in their role of enabling credit creation.

The Tesla news-led rally stretched beyond bitcoin. Shares of companies that provide trading platforms for bitcoin and the technology to “mine” the cryptocurrency surged in China, South Korea, and Australia, and big computer-chip making companies such as SK Hynix also rose.

MicroStrategy Inc., a business intelligence software firm and a bitcoin buyer, has climbed 215 per cent so far this year, after posting gains of 172 per cent in 2020.

Even dogecoin, a cryptocurrency with a dog as its symbol, has seen its value turbocharged after Musk mentioned it on Twitter. It has jumped 13 per cent in the past day, according to CoinMarketCap.

“It’s really become popular culture and mainstream,” Chu said. “People are no longer asking ‘Why should I invest in bitcoin?’ They’re having to defend why they’re not.”

 

Share if you like

Filter By Topic