In the midst of the Grand Theft Auto VI hype, where “BUY BTC” emblazons the leaked trailer, Bitcoin’s surge to $42,000 echoes promises of fortune. Yet, skeptics caution against exuberance, as the cryptocurrency’s value remains tethered to sentiment, not utility. Advocates cite its potential as a hedge, but historical ties to monetary easing and speculative bubbles raise doubts. In an era of economic uncertainty, betting on a virtual future raises questions of opportunity cost, especially when real-world challenges demand resources dwarfed by the trillion-dollar crypto market. The allure persists, but the cautionary clouds loom over Bitcoin’s meteoric rise.
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Bitcoin Hype Will Clash With the Rolex Recession: Lionel Laurent
By Lionel Laurent
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(Bloomberg Opinion) —
âBUY BTC.â The logo stamped on this weekâs leaked version of the Grand Theft Auto VI trailer, depicting a faux glamorous world of speedboats, supercars and âshoot-em-ups,â was well timed. Bitcoinâs price has almost tripled this year to around $42,000, where it was before the 2022 Terra debacle. Frothy six- to seven-figure price targets are back. With Coinbase Global Inc.âs boss touting Bitcoin as âkeyâ to the Westâs future and El Salvadorâs Nayib Bukele demanding his critics apologize, youâd think an actual use case had been found.
Except â it hasnât. And at the risk of sounding like the Simpsonsâ âOld Man Yells At Cloud,â there are plenty of reasons to be cautious about this umpteenth upward swing on the crypto rollercoaster ride at a time of economic slowdown and possible recession.
The bull case preached by the laser-eyed and Luna-tattooed crowd is, as before, driven by sentiment and speculation rather than utility. Bitcoin may be a glorified pet rock in terms of money-ness, but people like to hoard it and trade it as a risky hybrid of gold and NASDAQ startup in the hope of outsized gains. The optimistic view is that any news will be good news as bad actors like Sam Bankman-Fried or Changpeng Zhao get flushed out, mass-market spot ETFs get closer, and potential interest-rate cuts lift risk appetite. With a rising price providing a positive feedback loop, who wouldnât want to take a punt?
Yet looking back at Bitcoinâs history, what seems to have really propelled its price to records in recent years has been unprecedented monetary easing by central banks and an increase in money supply to new highs, neither of which look likely to happen again soon. A paper by S&P analysts published in May found a positive correlation of 0.75 â not quite causation, but suggesting more than coincidence â between money supply growth and crypto assets since 2017, with virtual money âperforming wellâ in times of expansionary monetary policy. As a hedge against economic shocks, the record was less clear â letâs not forget Bitcoin fell 50% when Covid-19 first hit in March 2020 â and as a hedge against inflation, the results were inconclusive and not as good as gold.
And if easy money is Bitcoinâs secret sauce, there doesnât seem to be much of it around. The Federal Reserveâs balance sheet peaked at nearly $9 trillion last year and has since fallen to around $7.8 trillion. Fears that still-high borrowing costs will coincide with a recession have squished demand for many other speculative assets that boomed during the pandemic, from NFTs to second-hand luxury watches. Hence the âRolex recessionâ concept: The average price of a second-hand Rolex has been sliding since 2022. Over the past month,  this corollary of the crypto-wealthyâs financial health is down almost 10% year-on-year. It seems a little cavalier to start drumming up enthusiasm for Bitcoin if we enter an environment where real cash, not the virtual kind, is king.
The counterview is that there might be some kind of optimal rational bet to be made when it comes to crypto: Allocating a small slice of oneâs portfolio, around say 1%, on the off chance that the crypto planets align might make sense. And maybe financial advisors will be under pressure to discuss such a strategy with their clients if and when ETFs get approved in the US.
But thereâs still an opportunity cost in throwing good dollars after virtual ones. At a time when speculation is expensive and the climate is in crisis, it seems a little out of step to be buying a token whose networkâs annualized carbon footprint is equivalent to an entire countryâs. The world could do a lot with the $1 trillion currently tied up in crypto markets. As the COP 28 conference gets underway, economists estimate $1 trillion per year is needed to support developing countries in their fight against climate change. Research last year suggested $1 trillion of wind turbines could power 300 million homes, or the US twice over.
For now, the hype is winning. In an allusion to The Hitchhikerâs Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, Tyler Winklevoss on Tuesday tweeted: âBitcoin at 42k is the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe and everything.â It may not be long before that answer starts to look a little â or even a lot â less reassuring.
Read also:
- Bitcoin skyrockets 140%, targets $40,000 amid ETF buzz and market optimism
- Tech guru Stafford Masie admits to being âBitcoin befokâ ahead of ETF launch
- Bet on Bitcoin: The âdigital goldâ is the ultimate safeguard against deflation, says Cathie Wood
© 2023 Bloomberg L.P.