Editorâs Note: Happy Chinese Lunar New Year! First Mover will not publish on Monday, February 15, which is Presidentsâ Day in the U.S. Cryptocurrency markets will be open, as they always are.
Bitcoin (BTC) was lower, after pushing early Friday to an all-time high price of $48,925, based on CoinDesk pricing.Â
Market activity was quiet due to the Lunar New Year celebrations across Asia and the upcoming Presidentsâ Day holiday in the U.S. on Monday, according to Craig Erlam, senior market analyst for the foreign-exchange brokerage Oanda. (Itâs the Year of the Ox, by the way, which is seen by some traders as bullish, in case you missed the story last week by CoinDeskâs Muyao Shen.)Â Â
In traditional markets, U.S. stock futures were lower, with one investor telling Bloomberg News that âinvestor exuberance has somewhat waned.â Gold weakened 0.5% to $1,817 an ounce.Â
JPMORGAN FEELS BITCOIN BURN: JPMorgan employees hounded senior trading-division management during an internal town hall meeting about when the largest U.S. bank might get into bitcoin, CNBC reported.  Â
RESERVE CURRENCY STATUS? ECB President Christine Lagarde said itâs âvery unlikelyâ that central banks will hold bitcoin in the near future. âI would say itâs out of the question,â Lagarde said during a conference call hosted by The Economist.Â
GIVE THE PEOPLE WHAT THEY WANT: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissioner Hester Peirce, sometimes known as âCrypto Momâ because of her sanguine views on the digital-asset industry, said the countryâs capital markets are ready for a bitcoin exchange-traded product. The SEC has refused to approve a bitcoin exchange-traded fund despite multiple applications. People are already eager to trade a bitcoin ETP, and âso if we donât give them the natural way, which I think would be an ETP, they are going to look for other (less optimal) ways to do it,â Peirce said Thursday on CoinDesk TV.Â
CANADA ISNâT WAITING: The first North American bitcoin ETF was approved Thursday by the Ontario Securities Commission. âPerhaps theyâre normal and SEC too conservative,â tweeted Eric Balchunas, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg. âEither way U.S. usually follows shortly after.â
FINANCE EXECS DEMUR ON BITCOIN: Top financial executives at Verizon, Cisco Systems and Mozilla see risks and accounting challenges in putting corporate money into bitcoin, the Wall Street Journal reported. Such anecdotes challenge the investment narrative that the cryptocurrency is set to benefit from a wave of new demand from companies. Â
BAIRâS A BEAR: Bitcoin prices are at ânosebleed levels,â said Sheila Bair, former chairwoman of the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and now chairwoman of the government-owned mortgage-finance company Fannie Mae. âStay away from it,â she said late Wednesday in a Bloomberg Radio interview. âItâs volatile. Itâs at nosebleed levels now. We donât know how sustainable that is.âÂ
INDIA GRACE PERIOD:Â Policymakers in India will provide a transition period if a proposed ban on cryptocurrency usage is passed as expected, Bloomberg reported. After that, cryptocurrency usage in all aspects will be banned via a new law set to be introduced in the current parliamentary session via the Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021.
How bitcoin gets to $1 million in 11 years, in one analystâs scenario
First Mover ran some back-of-the-envelope math earlier this week to illustrate just how scarce the supply of bitcoin might be for the bevy of new institutional investors and corporate treasurers now ostensibly considering an allocation to the cryptocurrency, following Teslaâs announcement earlier this week of a $1.5 billion purchase.Â
Now comes Charlie Morris, chief investment officer of ByteTree Asset Management, who has run his own calculations along similar lines, making First Moverâs amateur efforts look like the doodlings of a toddler.Â
Some 363,500 bitcoins will be awarded this year to cryptocurrency miners for helping to secure the blockchain network, Morris estimates. He assumes the miners âwill presumably sell most because that is their business.â
Further extrapolation leads to a figure of $18.17 billion: This is the amount of new bitcoin demand that would be needed this year to âsustain a $50,000 BTC price,â according to Morris.Â
For context, Morris writes that gold exchange-traded funds attracted $41 billion last year. âGiven the offsetting flows into bitcoin at the time, the evidence points towards gold investors switching into bitcoin,â Morris writes. âIf bitcoin can attract $41 billion in 2021, as gold did last year, expect to see an average bitcoin price of $100K.â
Itâs pretty bullish, in other words, but not crazily farfetched. As First Mover reported earlier this week, $2.02 billion has already flowed into bitcoin-focused investment products this year, based on a report Tuesday from the digital-asset manager CoinShares. And the CoinShares report doesnât even cover demand from investors or corporate treasurers who may be buying bitcoin directly through their own accounts, or purchases from retail traders who are looking for a piece of the action.Â
Factor in the Bitcoin blockchainâs quadrennial halvings, where miner rewards are cut in half, and the investment hurdle gets lower every four years. âIt keeps on falling thereafter, meaning that high prices are easier to sustain in the future than today,â Morris writes.Â
So what does that mean for bitcoin prices? Morris figures a $1 million price for bitcoin is reasonable by 2044 at a rate of $41 billion of new inflows per year. Bitcoin will hit the $1 million mark by 2036 if consumer price inflation averages 2.5%, or by 2032 if inflation averages 5%. Thatâs just 11 years from now, representing a 20-fold gain from current price levels.Â
Gavin Smith, CEO, Panxora Group: âBNY Mellonâs and Mastercardâs entry into the cryptocurrency space moves bitcoin two huge steps closer to mainstream acceptance.â
David Mercer, CEO, LMAX Group: âFinancial institutions are now preparing to follow their clients.â
Don Guo, CEO, Broctagon Fintech Group: âWe hope that the increasing adoption will urge the industry to prioritize liquidity provision through improving crypto infrastructure. This will ensure both existing and new participants consistently have access to the best prices and that the industry reaches the next level of maturity.â
Edward Moya, senior market analyst, Oanda: âImproved mainstream acceptance for cryptocurrencies are completely easing most regulatory concerns for now.â
Anthony Pompliano, Morgan Creek Digital, in a tweet: âEventually, every company will join the revolution.âÂ
Number of large bitcoin addresses swells, CoinDeskâs Omkar Godbole writes
Bitcoinâs blockchain data supports the popular narrative that bitcoinâs rally has been fueled by increased institutional demand.
Ether (ETH): Joel Kruger, cryptocurrency strategist at exchange LMAX Digital, offered CoinDeskâs Muyao Shen some price points to watch: âA break above [$1,840] will open the door for a test of massive resistance at $2,000, which represents a critical psychological barrier and measured move upside extension,â Kruger said. âWe see the first level of support at $1,680, with a break below to take the immediate pressure off the topside and open the door for a correction back down towards the $1,500 area.â
Avalanche (AVAX): Network comes to a near halt after a âbug in the cross-chain functionalityâ failed under high loads, according to Avalanche developer team on Reddit. The AVAX tokenâs price has jumped 15-fold already this year.Â
Tether (USDT): Dollar-linked stablecoinâs market cap surpasses $30B.
REMOTE WORKING STICKS: Another year of remote working looms as companies delay office-reopening plans to September or beyond, in many cases refusing to commit to specific dates, the Wall Street Journal reports. As First Mover wrote in November: âA secular transition to commuting-by-Internet might be taking place, perhaps one of the biggest labor-force transformations since the industrial revolution, which lured people to citiesâ¦. Governments and central banks are probably going to have to provide a lot of aid and stimulus to assure the transition goes smoothly, that society holds together, that people can manage.â
U.S. DEBT > 100% OF GDP:Â The governmentâs debt load is on track to exceed the size of the entire U.S. economy this year, largely due to the $4 trillion in emergency spending approved since March to fight the pandemic and stimulate output. The debt is forecast to reach 107% of gross domestic product in a decade.Â
PAY NOW OR PAY LATER: Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser for the German financial behemoth Allianz, writes in column for Bloomberg Opinion: âWhat is favorable for policy and markets now increases future risks, starting with financial instability. The more Wall Street surges ahead in the short term, the harder it is for eventually improving economic conditions to validate the ever more elevated asset prices in an orderly manner.â