The Voice of Truth is a voice that speaks for the voiceless, the weak, the oppressed, the lost. The Voice of Reason is a voice that appeals to wisdom, good faith and conscience. Jeremiah 30:3 "The days are coming when I will restore the fortunes of My people."
Monday, July 26, 2021
Monday, July 5, 2021
The Strange Story of Bitcoin & A New Financial Order
Despite the skeptics and critics of Bitcoin as an asset class or a currency, there is one thing that is compelling about the shift in money (speculative, retail and increasingly institutional) into Bitcoin: it’s the idea of a safe haven from the implosion of the fiat money system.
As a currency, it does not serve as a stable store of value with a volatility of 480% and a mean annual return of 226% over the last eight years. Is it an inflation hedge?
Well if you compare its annual movements with the CRB All
Commodities Index, it has very low correlation of 25% and with gold, the
correlation is slightly higher at 39%. Against equity assets such as the
S&P 500 and Nasdaq, the correlation with Bitcoin is around 45%.
So in
principle, Bitcoin’s low correlation with most asset classes makes it a
potentially good asset class to be part of a diversified portfolio. But what is
interesting in my study is that Bitcoin is reasonably well correlated with
Emerging Markets as shown in the chart below. Does this suggest that it is also
inversely correlated to the U.S. dollar?
Based on
the three key functions of a currency (measure of value, store of value and
means of exchange), Bitcoin does not qualify as a viable and efficient currency
given that its value fluctuates and it is slow in processing transactions.
But the key
attraction of Bitcoin, apart from serving as a diversification tool for
portfolio investors, is that it is a decentralized currency that is independent
of government and central bank controls, and by implication, it has no underlying
liability.
Anyone who
holds fiat currency will be subject to devaluation in its real purchasing value
as central banks continue to print money and debase the currency in order to
reduce their public debt burdens.
In the past
year, governments have piled on their debt levels in order to rescue their
economies from the pandemic-induced recession. This increase in debt was
accompanied by massive money printing by the U.S. Federal Reserve, the European
Central Bank and the Bank of Japan among the leading economies.
It is therefore no surprise that the fear of fiat money devaluation and hyperinflation has driven demand for Bitcoin, whose supply is limited at 21 million units.
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