Bitcoin has had a good pandemic, but is a long way from being a trusted store of value

  • Covid-19 has turbocharged the shift towards digital payments, and millennials who prefer bitcoin to gold as an alternative currency could signal a future trend. But talk of this risk asset emerging as the next safe haven is premature

A neon sign at a shop in Hillsboro, Oregon, showing that bitcoin is accepted as payment. Photo: AP
Bitcoin, the most widely traded cryptocurrency, has never been an investment for the faint-hearted. On December 18, 2017, the digital coin surged to an all-time high of US$19,511 in response to a frenzy of buying among crypto enthusiasts, who were drawn to the decentralised and digitised blockchain technology that underpins virtual currencies.
Yet, by the end of January 2018, bitcoin had lost nearly 50 per cent of its value, and finished the year trading at less than US$4,000. Many institutional investors – who had hoped that the launch of bitcoin futures contracts would help temper the wild price swings by allowing traders to hedge their positions in the digital currency – wrote off bitcoin as a market for hobbyists and gamblers.
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