Both of those theories are about to face their biggest test yet.
Bitcoin,
the original cryptocurrency, emerged more than a decade ago out of the
ashes of the global financial crisis as a bypass to the banks and
government agencies mired in Wall Street’s great calamity at the time.
The digital token steadily gained a following, inspired a rash of
wannabes and endured some wild rides. But it wasn’t until the next big
crisis, Covid-19, that the market really took off.
Crypto exploded
after March 2020, when the Federal Reserve and Congress unleashed
trillions of dollars’ worth of stimulus to blunt the pandemic’s economic
blow. A bunch of that cash made its way to digital assets,
turbocharging prices. Bitcoin soared 305% in 2020 and notched another
60% the following year, topping out at a record of almost $69,000 in
early November. Since then, though, it’s been on a relentless slide,
weighed down in large part by the central bank’s hawkish pivot. Now,
with odds rising that policy makers will commence a series of rate hikes
as soon as March - just one of several steps they’re set to take in
removing liquidity - it remains to be seen if the crypto ecosystem can
hold up without it.
It’s not looking good so far: Bitcoin is
already down some 40% from its highs, while No. 2 coin Ether and other
"altcoins" have also suffered steep declines.
"If they’re going to
hike rates three times in 2022 and keep the program, and the era of low
rates is over, we’re going to really see how much people believed in
their Bitcoin-crypto thesis," said Stephane Ouellette, chief executive
and co-founder of crypto platform FRNT Financial Inc. "I would expect
that the Fed getting more and more hawkish is very bad for valuations."
Michael
O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading, agrees. "The Federal
Reserve’s seemingly perpetual asset purchases have been the cornerstone
for crypto investing," he said. Should the central bank follow the path
laid out in its latest minutes release, which showed that Fed officials
are prepared to move faster than expected to lift interest rates and
potentially shrink the bank’s balance sheet, then "that would
immediately undermine the key bullish thesis behind Bitcoin and many
other cryptos," O’Rourke said.
For most of its 13-year history,
Bitcoin has enjoyed an environment of easy monetary policy and zero or
negative rates. While there is no straight through-line from the Fed’s
coffers to Bitcoin buy-orders on exchanges, there is a connection,
according to David Tawil, president of ProChain Capital, a crypto hedge
fund. For one, the Fed buying any type of asset can have ripple effects
and lift prices of other investments. "All the buying power, all the
investable power that exists has to go somewhere," he said by phone.
Second,
with rates at rock-bottom lows, investors have been forced to scour the
market for higher-yielding opportunities and many turned to crypto
given its ability to post outsize gains. Think of a junk-bond investor
who was accustomed to high-single-digit returns even on bad days, said
Tawil. "He’s going to be forced to put money into something ’riskier,’
but, more importantly, something that yields something he’s used to
getting."
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So
what happens when financial conditions become tighter? "The initial
move is the opposite of what happened when they put the money in -
everything’s going to go and swing the other way, until it settles
down," Tawil said. "That’s why you have this immediate reaction in the
market because everyone’s anticipating that the money is going to leave
the riskier stuff."
The last time the U.S. central bank raised
rates was in December 2018, its final increase in a series of hikes.
Back then, Bitcoin was trading at about $3,700 and concepts such as
"decentralized finance" and "non-fungible tokens" were years away from
entering the vernacular. It turned out to be a rough year for the
original cryptocurrency, particularly toward the end, when Bitcoin lost
more than 40% during the last two months - a period that also coincided
with a walloping in U.S. stocks.
That dynamic is playing out again
now, with Bitcoin falling in step with richly-valued equities ahead of
an expected new round of Fed tightening, says Peter Boockvar, chief
investment officer at Bleakley Advisory Group and editor of The Boock
Report.
"For now, it’s proving to be just a risk-on/risk-off
asset," he said. "I expect it to trade with other risk assets in
response to Fed tightening." Boockvar compared the digital coin to
Cathie Wood’s ARK Innovation ETF, which is seen as "the ultimate risk
asset" and which has also proven highly sensitive to Fed tightening as
investors start to pay more attention to valuations.
Bitcoin,
though, remains a supreme shape-shifter. It has represented many things
to many people for more than a decade now and its (often contradictory)
narratives will continue to evolve. After all, it’s been written off
time and again as dead, denounced as rat’s poison, and castigated as a
bubble only to come back stronger each time.
And as institutional
adoption increases, Bitcoin’s future may also become clearer, says Max
Gokhman, chief investment officer at AlphaTrAI, which is working on an
application of its artificial-intelligence algorithms for the
digital-asset space.
"We shouldn’t discount that in the future
Bitcoin use cases may evolve to where it reinvents itself and gains
importance anew," he said.
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