Camila Russo and Tugce Ozsoy - Canberra Times October 13, 2017
Bitcoin bubble or just the beginning? Or both? Those are the questions being asked on Wall Street to Main Street after the digital currency breached $US5,000 for the first time, pushing this year's gains to more than fivefold.
As recently as December, bitcoin was trading at less than $US1,000. Since then, it has dodged everything from tightening regulations, feuding factions splitting its underlying blockchain and warnings from the likes of JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon of fraud and an eventual price collapse.
The latest leg higher is being driven in part by increasing institutional interest, with everyone from Goldman Sachs's Lloyd Blankfein to Dimon saying they're now open to ways to get involved. The change of heart comes amid growing optimism about the blockchain technology.
"This record is an exciting milestone and sign of market confidence in the outlook for bitcoin and the underlying technology," said Iqbal Gandham, a managing director at eToro. "We expect many more milestones like this to come."
Interest is growing by the day, as measured by searches on the Internet. SEMrush, a data analytics firm, found the price had a 96 percent correlation with Google searches on bitcoin, suggesting that growing interest in the cryptocurrency is helping to drive demand.
Bitcoin tumbled below $US4,000 last month after China's central bank banned initial coin offerings and ordered all cryptocurrency exchanges to close. Reports that the Chinese government will ease those regulations is also helping the price.
A rotation out of digital tokens sold in initial coin offerings and into bitcoin is providing an additional boost. Investors are becoming increasingly wary as projects with little substance have mushroomed, and as hacks and technical issues have caused some to lose thousands. There's a Wu-Tang Coin with the sole purpose of buying and releasing the Wu-Tang Clan album bought by fraudster Martin Shkreli, while Paris Hilton and Floyd Mayweather publicised their ICO investments on social media. Bitcoin is seen as a crypto-safe haven next to many of these tokens.
"Everyone seemed to agree that once it broke through $US5,000, the sky is the limit. I wouldn't be surprised to see it double from here in a very short space of time," said Ben Kumar, a money manager at Seven Investment in London, who invests in bitcoin in an individual capacity. "There's a long time to run before people get tired of chasing the next big thing."
Bitcoin isn't the only one to benefit as lately it seems that shares of any company with even an indirect link to the cryptocurrency space is bound to rally. Overstock.com soared after announcing a regulated digital tokens exchange, while Goldmoney climbed after saying it will offer its clients the ability to trade and store bitcoin and rival digital currency ether.
In June, Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, which make hardware used in cryptocurrency mining, rallied as ether surged to a record. Bioptix's stock nearly doubled in the days leading up to the company's announcement that it's renaming itself Riot Blockchain.
Bitcoin's rally and the proliferation of other digital assets is attracting the wary eyes of regulators globally. China and South Korea banned ICOs, while Russian President Vladimir Putin this week called for regulation of the sector. At least 13 other countries have imposed new rules or announced plans to tighten regulations.
The digital currency's surge has divided the financial community between those convinced it is a bubble on the verge of popping, like billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio said, while other big-name investors like Mark Cuban and Mike Novogratz said they're investing in the sector.
Novogratz, who is starting a $US500 million cryptocurrency fund, said this week he believes the price will double to $US10,000 in less than a year. The road is sure to be rocky, as bitcoin's volatility is still 10 times that of gold.
"It's a very speculative market," Jon Moulton, a U.K.-based private equity veteran who owns bitcoins, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV's Francine Lacqua. "It's going to be a very volatile asset for a long time."
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