Mondayâs historic financial tumult reached beyond stocks, sinking commodities and even bitcoin markets.
âI donât think any asset is safe right now â except cash, U.S. dollars,â said Ali Khedery, formerly Exxonâs senior Middle East adviser and now CEO of U.S.-based strategy firm Dragoman Ventures.
While bitcoin (BTC) prices dropped nearly 10 percent over the weekend, Saudi Arabia slashed its export oil prices when Russia refused to support an Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) effort to reduce oil production. Coronavirus quarantines mean fewer cars on the road, economic slowdown and less demand for oil, experts warn.
Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData, described the current state as an âoversuppliedâ oil market where Saudi Arabia made a drastic move, harming everyoneâs bottom line, in an effort to âto get Russia back to the negotiating table.â
Smith said it will be difficult for nations to reconfigure their supply chains to circumnavigate the oversaturated market. Although nations like Iran appear to be interested in using the bitcoin mining industry to turn cheap power into global assets, both Smith and Khedery agree thereâs no serious interest in bitcoin as a market alternative any time soon.
âIn times of crisis, all markets correlate,â Smith said, arguing the dip contradicts bitcoinâs âsafe havenâ narrative.
Plus, an anonymous bitcoin mining farm operator in Iran said many operations are stalled by regulatory setbacks such as penalty fees for subsidized electricity. Bitcoiners may be thrilled about the potential to turn surplus energy into bitcoin, but so far it doesnât appear as though OPEC members are prioritizing mining infrastructure for that approach. The Iranian miner said the local industry doesnât appear to have any connection to strategies for abating a broader market crisis, at least none civilians are aware of.Â
Yet, if the oil market continues to plummet, Khedery said, âIt may cause Iran, Iraq and Venezuela to collapse.â
âIran is in deep trouble,â Khedery added, speaking of the oil-exporting nation hampered by both sanctions and a coronavirus outbreak.
Regardless, bitcoin bulls remain unfazed. Electric Capital co-founder Avichal Garg tweeted bitcoin may become a safe haven asset in the future. Bitcoin-focused investor Tuur Demeester said he expects the broader market chaos to increase bitcoinâs dominance on exchanges.
âWhat you want in a period of crisis is options,â Demeester said. âYouâll be attracted to an asset thatâs liquid. ⦠There are some people who are being forced to sell [bitcoin]. But, overall weâre in a very healthy [bitcoin] market.â
Likewise, Gabor Gurbacs, director of digital asset strategies at VanEck/MVIS, said adopting a bitcoin strategy is in the best interest of any country heavily involved in energy markets.
âWhile for now the petrodollar system remains dominant and the U.S. dollar outperforms other currencies, sovereign nations are increasingly searching for alternatives,â Gurbacs said, adding the safe haven narrative hasnât been disproven because âbitcoin is a relatively young asset and itâs not a full-fledged store of value yet.â
There were, indeed, rumors at the World Economic Forum in January that some nations are actively looking for alternative currencies to settle energy market trades. But such forum participants generally dismissed bitcoin as too nascent, and alternative fiat systems as a poor substitute for the dollar, at least so far.Â
âThe Russians and Chinese have been trying for years. And failing, it seems,â Khedery said.
Regarding the proverbial petrodollar, he added nations âcanât displace [USD] until there is a viable alternative.â