Noelle Acheson is a veteran of company analysis and CoinDeskâs director of research. The opinions expressed in this article are the authorâs own.
The following article originally appeared in Institutional Crypto by CoinDesk, a weekly newsletter focused on institutional investment in crypto assets. Sign up for free here.
Anyone seen the movie âParasiteâ? You know, the one about class mobility, creative solutions and scary basements.Â
I thought of that film after reading Jill Carlsonâs op-ed a couple of days ago â she looks at our collective surprise that bitcoin is not a safe haven, and in a gentle way asks âwell what did you expect?â She highlights that bitcoin (BTC) is too young to be considered a safe haven because its narrative is not yet formed. That doesnât mean it wonât eventually get there, though.
What does this have to do with a South Korean Oscar winner? Well, in âParasiteâ we spend the first hour thinking the film is about one thing but it turns out itâs not, itâs about something totally different.
The same thing is happening in cryptoland. Jillâs right: Bitcoinâs narrative is the key driver of its price trends, and it will change over time. The story isnât about what bitcoin âisâ but about what it âwill be.âÂ
An even more interesting narrative shift, however, is unfolding elsewhere.
Iâm talking about the rest of the market. Almost all of it, in fact. Narratives are shifting all over the place.
For instance, everyone knows you should have bonds in your portfolio because they offer income and stability. I mean, thereâs no way rates could go negative, right?Â
This week the yield on 30-year and 10-year U.S. government debt dropped to their lowest levels ever. The S&P 500 now yields more than Treasurys, calling into question the entire concept of ârisk distribution.âÂ
Even gold is behaving strangely. We hold it up as the ultimate example of a âsafe havenâ investment, and yet market structure shifts are calling that into question. Last week the gold price dropped almost 5 percent in one day, the largest daily fall in seven years, due to deleveraging pressure from derivative positions. And we tend to forget that gold fell almost 30 percent at the height of the 2008 market rout. Â
Goldâs role as a safe haven is entirely based on narratives: that shiny and yellow are desirable qualities (surely thatâs subjective?), that supply is limited (we donât know that for sure) and that heavy is good (youâll have heard the derogatory expression âsuch a lightweight!â). These days, heavy â as in very difficult to pick up and take with you â is perhaps not the indicator of utility it once was.
Even though we can all agree goldâs metallic properties are impressive, its position as the worldâs safe haven is no longer universally unassailable, and through no fault of its own. The narratives around it are changing, and the resumption of the gold price rally at the beginning of the week seems less based on conviction the metal will hold its value in times of trouble and more of a desperate realization thereâs nothing out there that can yet take its place.
Now, why so many narrative shifts all of a sudden? Actually, narratives are always changing â but the pace of change is usually much slower than what we are witnessing today.Â
What we are witnessing is a breakdown of assumptions, in a time of fear. Weâre worried about the economy, the banking system, the climate, living conditions, politics, education and the automatization of jobs. Add to that a growing feeling of vulnerability and concern about health and contagion.
In times of fear, we fall back on what we know, what we can be sure of. These days, thatâs not much.
In his poignant 1944 paper called âThe Social Psychology of Fear,â philosopher Kurt Riezler pointed out that âIf we do not know the nature of a danger, we make an assumption. Without such an assumption, we cannot act.âÂ
But what are assumptions if not conclusions based on narratives? We assumed interest rates would never go negative. We assumed house prices would never go down. We assumed profits were a good thing, and social media would liberate us.Â
So now, confronted by many dangers we are still struggling to understand, we are reaching for assumptions we no longer trust.Â
Bitcoinâs narrative is changing, as is to be expected for such a young and complex innovation. But so are the narratives that guide just about every other aspect of investing.Â
A few years from now, when the new narratives have settled into some semblance of normality, weâll look back on this time and realize that the bigger story was in front of us all along.