Interest from two camps is driving the Bitcoin price higher. The first wants to make a quick buck by capitalising on the interest and selling at a profit. The second sees the digital asset as a scarce resource which will increase in value because there is a fixed supply and normal currencies will be devalued by inflation.Â
While its moment in the limelight will fade and the punters will disappear, I believe that more and more “serious� investors will start buying cryptocurrencies as part of their investment portfolios as a hedge against rising inflation.
One group leading the way is Ruffer, the £20bn British fund house which bought Bitcoin to protect against inflation in its “all-weatherâ€� portfolios. BlackRock, the American fund giant, has also opened up two of its funds to invest in Bitcoin “futures”, a way of profiting from Bitcoin without owning coins directly. Chief executive Larry Fink said Bitcoin was here to stay.Â
I think he is right and other big investors will follow suit. Once the biggest players are onboard, a flood of new money could flow into Bitcoin, driving up its price. Given that we have over 100 Â years until the final Bitcoin is expected to be mined and it is only 12 years old, the journey has just begun.
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