- December 29, 2021
- Posted by: admin
- Category: BitCoin, Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, Investments
But concerns remain that the cryptocurrency would fall harder than its traditional rivals in 2022 on the U.S. Federal Reserve’s increasingly hawkish tones.
Bitcoin (BTC) may be down over 30% from its record high of $69,000, but it has emerged as one of the best-performing financial assets in 2021. BTC has bested the U.S. benchmark index, the S&P 500, and the gold.
Arcane Research noted in its new report that Bitcoin’s year-to-date (YTD) performance came out to be nearly 73%. In comparison, the S&P 500 index surged 28%, and gold dropped by 7% in the same period, which marks the third year that Bitcoin has outperformed.
At the core of Bitcoin’s extremely bullish performance was higher inflation. The U.S. consumer price index (CPI) logged its largest 12-month increase in four decades this November.
“Most economists didn’t see the high inflation coming, as witnessed by the 1-year ahead consumer inflation expectations,” the Arcane report read, adding:
With its 73% gain in the highly inflationary 2021, Bitcoin has proven itself to be an excellent inflation hedge.
Bitcoin holdings grew among institutional investment vehicles
Loose monetary policies and a sustained fear of higher inflation also prompted mainstream financial houses to launch crypto-enabled investment vehicles for their rich clients in 2021.
Arcane reported an inflow of 140,000 BTC (~$6.56 billion) across spot- and future-based Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETF) and physically-backed exchange-traded products (ETP) this year.
That prompted more Bitcoin units to get absorbed into investment vehicles, underscoring a greater institutional demand for the cryptocurrency.
In contrast, gold-backed ETFs witnessed an outflow of $8.8 billion in 2021, according to World Gold Council’s report published this December.
Volatility behind superior performance?
Nonetheless, Bitcoin’s relatively superior performance in 2021 has included periods of high volatility.
Many analysts believe that extreme price fluctuations keep Bitcoin from becoming an ideal inflation hedge. That includes Leonard Kostovetsky, a finance professor at Boston College, who recalled in his blog post that there had been 13 days in 2021 on which the BTC price has moved over 10% in one direction. Excerpts:
“It seems strange to think that a person who is worried about holding dollars because they lost 7% of their value over the last year would be comfortable holding Bitcoin which could (and often does) lose that much value in a single day.”
Arcane too recognized Bitcoin for being more volatile than the S&P 500 in 2021, noting that the cryptocurrency “behaved like a risk-on asset” by merely amplifying the most significant stock market movements.
The researcher cited VIX — a measure of the expectation of volatility based on S&P 500 index options — to exemplify the relationship between Bitcoin and stock markets. It noted that the BTC price fell hard whenever the VIX readings spiked in recent times, underscoring that institutional traders viewed Bitcoin as a risk-on asset.
As a result, Bitcoin’s potential to fall harder in the wake of a stock market correction also became higher. Arcane too noted that a bearish 2022 for the S&P 500 may end up wiping a big portion of Bitcoin’s gains.
“Therefore, be aware of stock market headwinds in the next year and their possible implications for bitcoin’s short-term price trajectory,” it added.
Related: Arcane Research releases its crypto predictions for 2022
But hedge fund manager Chris Brown went far in predicting an all-and-all Bitcoin doom in 2022. The Aristides Capital’s managing member stated that cryptocurrencies could face massive selloffs ahead as the U.S. Federal Reserve ends its $120 billion a month asset purchasing program followed by three rate hikes next year.
“If the Fed really does hike rates enough to make money considerably less loose, or if markets believe they will, you are going to see certain areas of speculation come to a screeching halt,” Brown said, adding:
The prime example of such asset speculation is cryptocurrency; here lies $2.64 trillion of ‘wealth’ that is backed by nothing and generates no cash flows.
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