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Global Financial Markets Struggling: Will Bitcoin Become a Safe Haven Asset?

2 mins
Updated by Ryan James
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In Brief

  • Peter Schiff sums up broader market malaise as DCG CEO Barry Silbert touts bitcoin's pedigree as a safe harbor for investors.
  • While the short-term outlook for crypto seems doomed to follow the stock market, longer term investors may see a buying opportunity.
  • Bitcoin briefly broke rank with stocks on Sep. 27, 2022.
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As the British pound collapses, bond prices decline, and interest rates increase, Digital Currency Group CEO Barry Silbert says that bitcoin will become the preferred safe-haven asset.

As stock markets tanked on Sep. 27, 2022, with the S&P 500 down by 1% by the end of the day and the tech-heavy Nasdaq down 0.6% on Monday following higher reported yields for 10-year Treasury notes, gold maximalist and bitcoin bear Peter Schiff predicts the U.S. Federal Reserve will follow in the footsteps of its U.K. counterpart and introduce quantitative easing.

“The Bank of England has already pivoted. As collapsing #bond prices and rising rates threatened a financial crisis, the BOA announced a new QE program to print pounds and buy #gilts. Record UK #inflation will now soar. Which central bank will blink next? Hint, it rhymes with Ted,” Schiff tweeted.

Schiff, known colloquially as the “gold bug,” has been a vocal critic of bitcoin, choosing instead to pitch gold as the superior inflation-resistant safe haven asset.

While Schiff’s prediction of the 2008 financial crisis came true, his views on inflation as an increase in monetary and asset prices leading to consumer price increases have been criticized by Nobel-Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, who believes in the Consumer Price Index as the measure of inflation. Krugman believes that the Fed’s money-printing exercises are not used to pay government bills in a country like Argentina but rather to keep prices rising at a predictable rate of about 2% each year. Hence the effect of inflation in those countries is not comparable to the U.S.

Still haven’t reached critical mass

On the other hand, DCG CEO Barry Silbert tweeted that the world’s largest cryptocurrency would become the world’s new safe haven asset amidst broader macroeconomic turmoil.

Indeed, bitcoin rallied on early Sep. 27, 2022, as the U.S. dollar briefly weakened before falling with the S&P 500 to under $19,000. It has rebounded with the Dow Jones Industrial Average and is trading at roughly $19,000 at press time.

While this shows a growing correlation with stocks, SkyBridge Capital CEO Anthony Scaramucci opined earlier this year that bitcoin won’t become an inflation hedge until the number of wallets holding bitcoin increases to a billion or more.

Others like billionaire and Gemini co-founder Tyler Winklevoss believe that bitcoin’s properties dictate that it should react differently to stocks and that any existing correlation between stocks and bitcoin exists only because bitcoin is still in its early days as an asset class.

The investment horizon is the key

Some experts believe that bitcoin breaking rank with stocks on Monday, Sep. 26, 2022, is a sign that fundamentals are suitable for the cryptocurrency, preceding a price rise.

Investors tend to shy away from cryptocurrencies when less-risky investments like bond-yields increase. But when long-term bond yields decrease, a so-called bond yield curve-inversion, investors may yet see a long-term opportunity presented by low crypto prices.

This means only one direction for bitcoin: up.

For Be[In]Crypto’s latest Bitcoin (BTC) analysis, click here

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David Thomas
David Thomas graduated from the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal in Durban, South Africa, with an Honors degree in electronic engineering. He worked as an engineer for eight years, developing software for industrial processes at South African automation specialist Autotronix (Pty) Ltd., mining control systems for AngloGold Ashanti, and consumer products at Inhep Digital Security, a domestic security company wholly owned by Swedish conglomerate Assa Abloy. He has experience writing software in C,...
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