This was the week the internet finally defeated Wall Street â at least for a few days. The wild rally in GameStopâs stock, fueled by an army of Reddit retail day traders, imposed devastating losses on hedge funds and showed how free trading tools and social media (memes) can now be harnessed by networks of individuals to achieve economic outcomes previously controlled by elites. The gobsmacking story of GameStop, Melvin Capital and r/WallStreetbets was tailor-made for the disruptive, anti-establishment vibe of the crypto community. This âWSB effectâ theme runs throughout this weekâs newsletter.Â
On the other side of the masses vs. establishment divide, this was also the week of the âDavos Agendaâ virtual event, held in lieu of the World Economic Forumâs annual meeting. It included the likes of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Chinese President Xi Zinping, a host of Fortune 500 CEOs and so forth.Â
My podcast co-host Sheila Warren, who happens to be the WEFâs blockchain lead, invited long-time WEF Managing Director Adrian Monck to this weekâs âMoney Reimaginedâ show. We talked directly about how the old guard deals with the changes that radical outsiders, such as crypto developers and tribes of activist retail investors, present. Have a listen at the link below after reading this weekâs newsletter.Â
BTC and ETH: Made for each other
As of 11:00 a.m. ET Friday, the year-to-date returns for bitcoin and ether show an easily discernible reversal of the BTC dominance seen in late 2020. Bitcoin is up 27% year to date and ether, 92%.
Whatâs going on here? Well, before wetry to answer that, a caveat: If the past weekâs WallStreetBets-vs-hedge funds spectacle has taught us anything, itâs that in todayâs meme-consuming, radically democratizing markets, confidently defining fundamental reasons for price movements is difficult. What matters is which narrative is winning.
So, what narrative best explains ETH outperforming BTC? Well, letâs first challenge the âTulip Bubbleâ angle that mainstream crypto critics might instinctively apply here: The idea this is a rerun of the 2017 bitcoin rally, which pushed speculators into comparatively cheaper tokens only to foster the mother of all bubbles. The loss suffered this week by short-selling hedge funds at the expense of hordes of retail investors from the r/WallStreetBets subreddit shows itâs dangerous to conclude that large groups of determined bulls are inherently wrong.
This is not to say ETHâs price wonât correct as bitcoinâs has this month. It just means we owe it to ourselves to explore other narratives.
Such as? Hereâs one: Thereâs a BTC-to-ETH price rotation going on that suggests thoughtful investors are starting to see Ethereum, and more specifically the decentralized finance (DeFi) applications built on it, as a constructive complement to Bitcoin. As sophisticated investors increasingly recognize bitcoinâs potential as a âdigital goldâ store of wealth, the thesis goes, they will soon see DeFi as a means to creatively unlock that value â for payments, for loans, for insurance, and so forth.
This take sees Bitcoin as the base layer protocol for a software stack that handles the internetâs value storage and exchange. Bitcoin the currency is a simple yet hard-to-change, highly secure store of value. Much like gold, it doesnât do much; you just lock it away and use it as security to back up your other investments and financial activity. But because itâs built on a permissionless protocol, developers can still do many more creative things with it than, say, a gold custodian can do with bullion.
Thatâs where Ethereum and DeFi come in. With smart contracts, oracles, decentralized exchanges and multi-sig systems for securing digital assets, the degens of DeFi are now incorporating bitcoin into their freewheeling, âcomposableâ world of decentralized financial products. Hence the summer explosion of wrapped bitcoin tokens such as WBTC.
To go back to the software stack analogy, Ethereum is middleware and DeFi occupies the application layer.
(Moe Na/CoinDesk)
Analogies are also being made to the traditional finance âstack.â RealVision CEO Raoul Pal says bitcoin is âpristine collateralâ that could even take on the $123 trillion market for U.S. Treasury bonds as the base-level security for all credit. Itâs appeal is not only that itâs a provably scarce asset, but also that it can be locked up in escrow through a decentralized smart contract that leaves neither lenders nor borrowers vulnerable to the failures of a middleman. You build DeFiâs lending, borrowing and insuring products on top of that feature and you now have the makings of a financial system.
Now a mega-name celebrity investor is also warming to the thesis. Asked by CoinDesk contributor Jeff Wilser if he would ever see bitcoin as something more than a speculative investment, Dallas Mavericks owner and CNBC âShark Tankâ personality Mark Cuban responded, âSure. If DeFi and BTC can evolve together in a manner that allows BTC to effectively be a bank account without the bank. That creates utility for BTC.â What does he think of Ethereum? âI like ETH. Obviously itâs a primary foundation for DeFi, and we will see what happens with ETH 2.â
Ah, Eth 2. The Elephant in the Room. If Ethereum 2.0 succeeds, over the next couple of years the blockchain will transition from a proof-of-work consensus model to proof-of-stake and will allow massively more transaction-processing capability. That scalability is needed if Ethereum is to play a meaningful role in the global financial system. But the transition is incredibly difficult to pull off within a large, decentralized community of users where billions of dollars are at stake.
Still, there seems to be early optimism around Eth 2.0. The amount of ether locked and staked on the transitional Beacon Chain has steadily risen to more than 2.8 million ETH as of Wednesday (an amount currently worth about $3.89 billion). Indeed, etherâs steady January gain to an all-time high of $1,476.12 on Sunday was itself an expression of confidence in that project.
There are other ticks in the plus column for Ethereum. Thereâs a boom in non-fungible tokens, also captured in the Cuban interview. And thereâs support, including from suddenly in-the-news social media platform Reddit, for using so-called layer 2 scaling solutions such as Plasma to expand Ethereumâs use cases. Meanwhile, EY blockchain lead Paul Brody is predicting financial institutions will bring DeFi to the masses.
All of this points to an expanding and diversifying Ethereum ecosystem. For a blockchain, thatâs the best story you can tell: a growing network.
Did Trump help bitcoinâs late-2020 surge?
Since weâre talking about narratives, letâs look at how we might visually represent a market-justifying story. Iâve chosen a take by CoinDesk Global News Editor Kevin Reynolds on the role played by fears of electoral chaos on bitcoinâs price rise during the late fall and early winter. I can buy this story: If bitcoin is digital gold, it should work as a backstop against dystopia. But what I also found interesting was how easy it was to illustrate this idea on a chart. I just grabbed a few election-related statements by former President Donald Trump and his supporters, got CoinDesk data visualizer Shuai Hao to mark them on a four-month chart from our subsidiary company TradeBlock and the yellow line did the rest.
TradeBlock XBX(Shuai Hao/CoinDesk)
Source: https://tradeblock.com/markets/index
(NOTE: This chart was produced late Thursday New York time, before bitcoinâs huge leap to a new post-Jan. 8 high of $38,000 early Friday morning. The story may need a new chapter. Arrival of the WSB effect?)
Kevin argues that electoral fear added an extra $10,000 to the all-time high that was hit right after the climactic Jan. 6 raid on Congress. The rest of the gains came from the standard stuff everyone was talking about: mainly that institutional investors were now adding bitcoin to their long-term portfolios. So, when things simmered down and new President Joseph Biden was sworn in, bitcoinâs price eased to what would be fair value in normal times â you know, amid a normal global pandemic and economic depression.
The Conversation: Ants vs. elephants
In 2014, when the idea of decentralized autonomous organizations was first being kicked around, crypto pioneer and DAO enthusiast Joel Dietz founded a decentralized fundraising platform called âSwarm.â (It has since evolved into Swarm Capital, which provides tools for companies to issue security tokens.) The name always struck me as an evocative one for an entity comprising many individuals without centralized control.Â
Now, after digesting this heady week on Wall Street, the term seems especially apt. Iâm talking, of course, about how retail investors in a Subreddit that quickly swelled to 4.4 million people collectively forced big hedge funds into a âshort squeezeâ on supposedly has-been âmeme stocksâ such as GameStop, AMC Entertainment and BlackBerry. The WSB group maneuver imposed billions of dollars of losses on those institutions. Melvin Capital needed an injection of $2.75 billion from Citadel and Point72. One thinks of a swarm of ants attacking elephants.
That the name stems from a crypto venture is also fitting since the WSB saga prompted an outpouring of interest from the crypto community. It had all the elements of a crypto drama, even though the battle never occurred on a blockchain.Â
For one, there was a much-discussed CNBC interview with Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya, who had spent time trawling through the r/WallStreetBets posts and, following the groupâs lead, made a $500,000 profit. Declaring that what he âlearned over the last couple of days is important for everybody thatâs watching CNBC,â Chamath said the insurgent investor movement was âa pushback against the establishment in a very important way,â one that harked back to the 2008 financial crisis. It captured the rebellious, anti-Wall Street vibe thatâs long been part of the crypto community.
As the drama unfolded, Crypto Twitter lit up with people drawing parallels with and lessons about the crypto scene.
In a tweet thread about people demanding change to a system rigged for the big guys, Galaxy CEO Mike Novogratz said the movement was âa giant endorsement of DeFi.â
Then, on Thursday, when the Redditorsâ favored trading app, Robinhood, shut down access to the the stocks in question â creating a vitriolic backlash in what one observer called the trading appâs own âStreisand Effectâ â the crypto community leapt to remind the world that this could never happen on a decentralized exchange. It was the perfect opportunity for Erik Voorhees, CEO of Shapeshift, to weigh in about his companyâs new decentralized offering.
Going into the year-end was an exciting period for bitcoiners. Many large-name investors emerged to declare their appreciation of bitcoinâs potential and the price responded accordingly.Â
As the price dropped back in the latter part of January, the âinstitutions are comingâ rallying cry tempered. Big-name investors still showed interest in bitcoin, but some of their messages emphasized their caution and focused on the challenges they still see bitcoin facing before it attains a widely recognized place in institutional portfolios. CoinDeskâs coverage this past week captured that. (Weâll have to see how next weekâs stories look if bitcoin holds the gains it enjoyed Friday morning and as these institutions take stock of the powerful reckoning theyâve been confronted via a retail investor insurrection.)
Guggenheim Partners Chief Investment Officer Scott Minerd, who made waves last year when he assigned a long-term target of $400,000 to bitcoin, didnât exactly retract that prediction but added an implicit ânot any time soonâ caveat. In a Bloomberg interview he said, âRight now, the reality of the institutional demand that would support a $35,000 price or even a $30,000 price is just not there.â After Fridayâs jump, that comment is looking a little off.
Journalists are always looking for comments from Dallas Mavericks owner and CNBC âShark Tankâ personality Marc Cuban. Crypto journalists are no exception. So, we were thrilled that CoinDesk contributor Jeff Wilser had a rich exchange with Cuban this week. As discussed above, Cuban sees real potential in bitcoin, especially if it can team up with DeFi. But as a standalone investment for now, his current view is, letâs say, âmeh.â
Weâve also long been trying to get legendary Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalioâs thoughts on bitcoin. He has remained mostly skeptical, even if his tone has become moderately more upbeat over time and his view has emerged only via small snippets of commentary. Finally, in his widely read Daily Observations newsletter, Dalio and his team have delivered a detailed, deep-dive analysis of bitcoinâs opportunities and challenges. Iâd say Dalio still has a small amount of learning to do â for example, on why bitcoin canât easily be replaced by a âbetterâ cryptocurrency â but otherwise this is a brilliant analysis. His teamâs assessment of bitcoinâs infamous volatility and why that makes it hard for portfolio managers to adopt it as loss-mitigating uncorrelated asset is masterful. (Oh, and Iâm super excited to tell you that Dalio will be a headline keynote at CoinDeskâs Consensus event in May. Stay tuned for more exciting speaker announcements as we update the events page.)
Perhaps the most important news of the week on the institutional investor side was Ian Allisonâs scoop that the trustees who run the endowments of Harvard, Yale, Brown and other universities have been investing in bitcoin for over a year. What we need to know is why. The colleges are, for now, keeping the justification for their entry into this market close to their chest. Without that, itâs hard to know whether theyâll keep it up.
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