bitcoin concept photo

The Wild Ride of Bitcoin

Who knows what it will be worth next year – or next week.

 Provided by The Northeast Investment Group

The ups and downs of bitcoin have amazed investors. Back on April 1, 2017, one bitcoin was valued at $1,089.51. Five months later, the price had risen to $4,950.72. On December 16, the price hit a historic peak at $19,343.04.1

With the price of bitcoin jumping nearly 1,800% in less than nine months, the air in the commodities markets grew thick with hype: bitcoin was “unstoppable.” Well, not quite. By December 30, bitcoin’s price had sunk to $12,629.81. After rebounding to $17,135.84 a week later, it then stair-stepped down to $6,914.26 on February 5. Who knows what a bitcoin will be worth by the time you read this?1

We do know one thing: bitcoin is one of the riskiest investments around.

Bitcoin fever has yet to abate. Investors of all ages are asking about it (and other digital currencies). Should they put some of their retirement savings into bitcoin? Should they hedge with bitcoin? Will they miss out on “the next big thing” if they stay out of bitcoin?

If you are reluctant to get on the bitcoin bandwagon, you are hardly alone. Bitcoin presents a few perplexing questions for any investor.

Q: What is bitcoin, really? There are now bitcoin futures markets on the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) and CME Group, so you can now think of bitcoin as a commodity – but many bitcoin investors and users see it as a currency.

Q: How do you analyze it as an investment? If you want to research a stock, fundamental metrics are available. Not so for bitcoin or other cybercurrencies.

Q: Who determines bitcoin’s value? Speculators. At present, there really is no other answer to this question. The free market defines bitcoin’s worth. No government or central bank regulates it or assigns any value to it.

Bitcoin’s price can fall dramatically due to the headlines, or even comments from opinion leaders. In 2017, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon called bitcoin “a fraud,” and it fell 10% in response. (Dimon later said he regretted the remark.) Within the last year, South Korea and China revealed plans to restrict bitcoin trading; when South Korea made its announcement in January, bitcoin and ethereum prices fell 14% in a day. Another bitcoin shock came when Silk Road, an infamous website linked to drug trafficking, suddenly vanished. If you are wondering why the bitcoin market took that shutdown as a negative, you should know that bitcoin has been linked to money laundering, drug deals, and other shady financial transactions conducted on the “dark web.” While all Bitcoin transactions are verified through the blockchain, a kind of digital account book that renders transaction records transparent, some Bitcoin buyers and sellers have managed to stay anonymous.2,3

Q: What are the chances that bitcoin will become the “new gold?” Governments, banks, and institutional investors share a foundational belief that gold is a valuable commodity, and will remain so in the future. Does bitcoin have such a foundational belief beneath it?  

If speculators stopped believing bitcoin was valuable, then how valuable would it be? Nearly worthless, in the eyes of some observers. As NerdWallet investment writer Andrea Coombes recently remarked, “The value is in the demand itself.”4

In fact, Goldman Sachs analysts wonder if bitcoin will be valueless five or ten years from now. In a February note to investors, Goldman warned that bitcoin could very well be replaced by something else as cybercurrency evolves.5

In the financial markets, higher prices are not always succeeded by higher prices. This is essentially the belief holding up bitcoin. Its biggest fans believe its direction will be up and up, with occasional storms of volatility. This is called irrational exuberance, and it has harmed many investors through the years.

Whether you think bitcoin is the “new gold” or amounts to a bubble ready to burst, its extreme, dangerous volatility means one thing – if you do choose to invest in it, you would be wise to only invest money that you can afford to lose.

 

The Northeast Investment Group may be reached at 855-232-6748 or at info@northeastinvestmentgroup.com

Citations.

1 – coindesk.com/price/ [2/7/18]

2 – money.cnn.com/2018/01/11/technology/south-korea-bitcoin-ban-bill-minister/index.html [1/11/18]

3 – theguardian.com/technology/2017/sep/13/from-silk-road-to-atms-the-history-of-bitcoin [9/14/17]

4 – nerdwallet.com/blog/investing/is-bitcoin-safe/ [12/7/17]

5 – marketwatch.com/story/most-cryptocurrencies-are-heading-to-zero-says-goldman-analysts-2018-02-07 [2/7/18]