Despite the increase in the price of bitcoin amid the UKâs recent EU referendum, a new research note from Needham & Company asserts it might be too early to call the digital currency a âsafe havenâ asset.
Global bitcoin prices have risen nearly 6% over the dayâs trading to reach a high of $680, a figure up more than $100 from a low of $561.46 on 23rd June. Market observers were quick to assert the increase, which occurred as sentiment in the âBrexitâ vote shifted, was a sign this uncertainty had encouraged new investment in the digital currency markets.
However, Needham said its researchers are âhesitantâ to call bitcoin a safe haven alongside gold, US Treasurys, yen and USD.
The note reads:
âFor one, calling it such obfuscates the fact that bitcoin is a high-risk and volatile investment and, second, bitcoinâs correlation to other traditional safe-haven assets has fluctuated significantly.â
Still, Needham called the âBrexitâ a positive for the digital currency market, as it shows that bitcoin has the potential to rally around marcoeconomic uncertainty and on developments within its own technical ecosystem.
âOn the one hand, bitcoin is performing like a safe-haven asset but, on the other hand, its newness and dynamism do not resemble US Treasurys or gold,â the note reads.
Ultimately, the note concludes bitcoin might not fit into any existing asset definitions, concluding:
âWe believe that bitcoin is something entirely different that does not fit into the normal buckets that investments are typically bracketed into.â
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