Bitcoin Climbs Past $50,000 After Backing From Ark’s Cathie Wood

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Bitcoin rallied back above $50,000 on Wednesday, aided by supportive comments from Ark Investment Management’s Cathie Wood.

The largest cryptocurrency advanced as much as 5.4 per cent to about $50,557 in Asian trading. The rebound follows a tough week for the token, including a drop to $45,000 yesterday that revived doubts about the durability of a breathtaking and volatile fivefold surge over the past year.

Overall investor sentiment has also been boosted by comments Tuesday from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who signaled the central bank is nowhere close to unwinding its easy policy. Cryptocurrencies have been buoyed by a tide of monetary and fiscal stimulus to fight the impact of the pandemic.

Also read: Indian millennials drawn to Bitcoin’s charms

Wood, the superstar head of Ark, said in a Bloomberg interview she’s “very positive on Bitcoin, very happy to see a healthy correction here.”

Bitcoin remains lower than its recent record of about $58,350, but the pullback so far has been “relatively modest,” Bespoke Investment Group wrote in a blog post.

The cryptocurrency rally is at the center of one of the hottest debates in financial markets. Believers see an emerging asset class being embraced by long-term investors, not just speculators. Critics fear Bitcoin is in a bubble that will inevitably burst.

Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk in recent tweets said Bitcoin prices “seem high,” having earlier called it a “less dumb” version of cash. Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates cautioned about how investors can be swept up in manias. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Bitcoin is an “extremely inefficient way of conducting transactions.”

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Mastercard to open up network to select cryptocurrencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Mastercard Inc said on Wednesday it was planning to offer support for some cryptocurrencies on its network this year, joining a string of big-ticket firms that have pledged similar support.

The credit-card giant’s announcement comes days after Elon Musk‘s Tesla Inc revealed it had purchased $1.5 billion of bitcoin and would soon accept it as a form of payment.

Asset manager BlackRock Inc and payments companies Square and PayPal have also recently backed cryptocurrencies.

Mastercard already offers customers cards that allow people to transact using their cryptocurrencies, although without going through its network.

“Doing this work will create a lot more possibilities for shoppers and merchants, allowing them to transact in an entirely new form of payment. This change may open merchants up to new customers who are already flocking to digital assets,” Mastercard said.

Mastercard specified that not all cryptocurrencies will be supported on its network, adding that many of the hundreds of digital assets in circulation still need to tighten their compliance measures.

Many cryptocurrencies have struggled to win the trust of mainstream investors and the general public due to their speculative nature and potential for money laundering.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

India has a backdoor entry into digital currency. Will it take it?

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


India’s central bank is opening its balance sheet to the public. Retail investors will have online access to the government bond market via investment accounts with the Reserve Bank.

As the government’s investment bank, the RBI manages institutional buying and selling in gilt securities. Scepticism is high about ‘Retail Direct’ because previous attempts at bringing public debt to the masses haven’t gone anywhere. But if the initiative takes off, it could be a precursor to an interest-paying digital currency competing with bank deposits.

Also read: Bill to regulate cryptocurrencies being finalised: Thakur

The idea of a central bank digital currency, which will reside on smartphones but as a direct claim on the state (rather than a bank) is gaining ground everywhere. Covid-19 has made people reluctant to handle cash for fear of infection. The pandemic has also underscored the need to extend timely financial support to people who don’t have bank accounts.

The rise of cryptocurrencies and Facebook Inc’s Libra initiative, now known as Diem, have made authorities sit up and take note. If they don’t offer their own official tokens, private coins — or another country’s virtual cash — might fill the vacuum. Any semblance of monetary sovereignty in emerging markets may be compromised.

A quarter of the world’s population is likely to get access to a general purpose central bank digital currency in one to three years, according to the latest Bank for International Settlements survey of monetary authorities. Regulators in another 21 per cent of jurisdictions aren’t ruling out the possibility that they, too, might join in. That number is up from 14 per cent in a 2019 BIS poll.

Unlike China, which is running pilots, and the European Central Bank, which will soon publish results of its public consultations, India is not a frontrunner in the race to issue virtual cash. While summing up the many changes in the payments landscape over the past decade, the RBI said last month that it’s “exploring the possibility as to whether there is a need for a digital version of fiat currency and in case there is, then how to operationalise it.”

Also read: Cryptocurrency surge may continue, but regulatory uncertainties create bottlenecks

That’s why Retail Direct assumes significance, says Krishna Hegde, head of strategy at Setu, a Bangalore-based fintech firm. Rather than taking the weight of individual investors on its core banking system, perhaps the RBI will only allow their banks to act as custodians. Individual investors will come to the government securities marketplace through their banks’ so-called Constituents’ Subsidiary General Ledger accounts with the monetary authority. But if money can move quickly and without friction between these accounts at the central bank, India may get a version of official digital cash.

This could have long-run implications for the banking system. State Bank of India, the country’s biggest lender, offers 2.7 per cent interest on demand deposits, and 5.4 per cent on five-year deposits. A seven-day treasury bill yields 3 per cent, and a five-year government bond trades at 5.8 per cent. Banks with large deposit bases may not want to popularise a product that could undermine their hold on low-cost household savings. But newer institutions like payments banks, which take small deposits and aren’t allowed to lend commercially, will run with it. Vijay Shekhar Sharma, a fintech pioneer and chairman of Paytm Payments Bank, says he’ll make Retail Direct a key feature. “By offering gilt securities, we’ll be able to offer high yields and super safe products to consumers,” he told me.

Whether meaningful excess yield will actually be available will depend on liquidity, and the cost for market makers to provide it. That’s where blockchain might come in handy. Self-executing contracts programmed into virtual tokens can help fractionalise and democratise finance by automating trade settlement, making it both quicker and less expensive. Once they’re widely used as a store of value, the tokens could also start circulating as a means of exchange. Anyone may be able to pay for a coffee using her account with the central bank, just as she does today by debiting her balance with a commercial bank.

An interest-bearing virtual currency may help counter the appeal of other private and official digital cash to India’s millennial savers. The federal and state governments will obtain financing for a part of their chronic budget deficits — which have ballooned after the pandemic — directly from households. They can do so even now by scooping up postal and other small savings. But those borrowings are more expensive than what it costs to raise funds in the bond market. Without guaranteed recourse to cheap and sticky current and savings account balances, banks will have to work harder to earn a return on equity.

Perhaps the central bank doesn’t have any of these objectives in mind, and it’s giving retail investors direct access to the bond market only to protect its turf from the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the securities regulator. Whatever the motivation, once it gets off the ground, the RBI should consider Retail Direct as a prototype for digital cash, and allow experimentation in a supervised environment. It’s an idea that could go far.

(This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.)

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Two-day bitcoin plunge shakes faith in cryptocurrency boom, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The white-knuckle Bitcoin ride took another twist Monday as a two-day tumble in the digital currency stoked concern that the polarizing cryptocurrency boom may run out of steam.

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, slid as much as 18 per cent over Sunday and Monday to as low as about $33,500. That’s the biggest two-day slide since May last year and follows a record high of almost $42,000 on Jan. 8.

“It’s to be determined whether this is the start of a larger correction, but we have now seen this parabola break so it might just be,” said Vijay Ayyar, head of business development with crypto exchange Luno in Singapore.
Bitcoin’s price has more than quadrupled in the past year, evoking memories of the 2017 mania that first made cryptocurrencies a household name before prices collapsed just as quickly.

True believers in Bitcoin argue the difference this time is the asset has matured with the entry of institutional investors and is increasingly seen as a legitimate hedge against dollar weakness and inflation risk. Others worry that the rally is untethered from reason and fueled by vast swathes of fiscal and monetary stimulus, with Bitcoin unlikely to ever serve as a viable currency alternative.

“Bitcoin is almost certainly in another bubble and its current growth rate is not sustainable,” Howard Wang, co-founder of Convoy Investments LLC said in a Jan. 10 note. “While it may mature in the future, Bitcoin as it exists is largely a speculative asset.”

Bitcoin has shrugged off recent dips and may do so again, potentially recovering to as much as $44,000 “before the actual correction,” Luno’s Ayyar said.

The coin pared some losses Monday and as of 2:03 p.m. in Tokyo was around $35,600. Rival digital assets are also slumping, with second-largest coin Ether tumbling as much as 20 per cent.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 3 4 5