However, investors whom Mint spoke to build a case for bitcoin apart from just momentum. In this piece, we look at the reasons for their interest in the cryptocurrency.
A substitute for gold
Gold rose around 27% in 2020. It has a been a traditional favourite among Indian households, but its return has been far outstripped by the four-time rise of bitcoin in 2020.
As a result, some investors are considering to shift a small part of their portfolios from gold to bitcoins. Amit Kumar Gupta, a New Delhi-based portfolio manager at Adroit PMS, a Sebi-registered portfolio management firm, asked clients to shift from gold to bitcoin in August 2020. Since then, the cryptocurrency has roughly quadrupled in value in rupee terms, handsomely beating the yellow metal (which has stayed flat) as well as the equity markets (Nifty is up around 25% since August).
Gupta hasn’t withdrawn his clients’ money from bitcoin since then, but is keeping a close watch on the cryptocurrency. “We started buying bitcoin for our HNI (high networth individual) clients in August. Our model portfolio for moderate risk clients is 70-30-10 in equities, debt and gold. We asked clients to move the gold allocation to bitcoin. There was more comfort among family offices and HNI clients outside India on this shift. Within India, we went as per the client’s comfort level. We think that institutional adoption will move bitcoin higher in the coming years,” said Gupta.
Global interest
In October 2020, PayPal, a payments provider in the US, allowed investors to hold cryptocurrency in their wallets. Other US companies like Microstrategy also parked a portion of their treasuries in it in 2020. “The Grayscale Bitcoin trust for example has gone from $2 billion AUM (assets under management) to $20 billion in a year,” said Gupta.
Even sceptics are changing their views partly. “I was very skeptical of bitcoin in 2017. However, this year, the institutional acceptance of bitcoin has changed my mind. I invested around 5% of my savings in it in August, in a staggered manner. I will pull out my initial capital but let my profits remain. I also see it as a substitute for gold,” said Thakkar, 25, a Mumbai-based asset management professional, who declined to provide his first name.
Scarcity of supply
The supply of bitcoins is restricted to 21 million. Around 18 million bitcoins have already been mined and are in circulation. Unlike fiat currencies like the dollar or the rupee, this supply cannot be increased by any government or central bank, a fact that gives great comfort to crypto investors.
Such investors are uncomfortable with the surge in money printing by central banks during the covid-19 pandemic, which draws them to bitcoin. The balance sheet of the US Federal Reserve has jumped from $4 trillion to around $7 trillion in 2020, a 75% growth in a single year, expanding the supply of dollars at a rapid pace.
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Read more:Four factors that are pushing investors into buying bitcoins