BITCOIN is sustaining a record-breaking run, lifted by the unprecedented amounts of capital flowing into crypto products as well as a looming reduction in the digital token’s supply growth.
The original cryptocurrency reached an all-time peak of almost US$72,881 on Monday (Mar 11) and was trading at US$72,165 as at 11.25 am in Singapore on Tuesday. A record US$2.7 billion flowed into crypto assets last week, according to a report from CoinShares International, with the bulk of that going to Bitcoin. Both the token and a gauge of the largest 100 coins are up roughly 70 per cent this year.
The success of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) launched in the United States on Jan 11 is a key driver of recent momentum. The ETFs from the likes of BlackRock and Fidelity Investments have attracted a net inflow of about US$9.5 billion so far. In the United Kingdom, the London Stock Exchange said it would accept applications for Bitcoin and Ether exchange-traded notes, while Thailand’s securities regular signalled that it would open overseas crypto ETFs to retail buyers.
“We are seeing institutional adoption in the US,” Ophelia Snyder, 21Shares’ co-founder and president, said on Bloomberg Television. “It is quite early still. Not all of the institutions, not all of the wire houses, have access to it.”
The structure of the Bitcoin market is changing as they enter the fray, for instance a greater focus on US trading hours, she added.
Some commentators are flagging the possibility of further gains. Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG Australia Pty, wrote in a note that Bitcoin “is expected to be well-supported on dips by those looking to position for a push towards US$80,000 in the months ahead”. Fairlead Strategies technical analyst Katie Stockton also suggested US$80,000 is within reach in the medium term.
Bitcoin’s rally is creating roughly 1,500 new “millionaire wallets” daily, according to crypto analytics firm Kaiko Research, though the nature of blockchain data means it is difficult to determine which of those wallets are held by individuals and which by companies. That is still lower than the pace of millionaire wallets minted during the token’s 2021 bull run, however, when more than 4,000 wallets a day hit the million-dollar mark.
Next month, Bitcoin undergoes an event known as the halving, which as the name suggests cuts the supply of new Bitcoin in half. Demand from ETFs, constrained supply and expectations of looser monetary policy are all stoking a bullish mood in crypto – leading investors to put memories of the painful and deep 2022 bear market to one side.
The positive backdrop spread to Asian stocks related to digital assets, including advances on Tuesday in companies such as Japan’s Monex Group and Woori Technology Investment in South Korea. BLOOMBERG