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Crypto Long & Short: GameStop, Dogecoin and a New Market Paradigm

It’s strenuously to do justice to the symbolism and significance of the Reddit-Robinhood-GameStop drama of this past week.

That’s not to say it hasn’t been overblown in some territories. I’ve heard it compared to the Capitol riots – no, that was sedition, this is rebellion, very different. I’ve seen calls for the regulators to agreement with in and shut down retail trading platforms, even though it’s not clear a crime has been committed. And I’ve read believes painting the leaders of this charge as “misfits.” That condescension itself is part of the problem.

The protagonists are not misfits – they are retail investors exercising their collective muscle, the very same muscle the “establishment” encouraged them to develop.

You’re reading Crypto Hunger & Short, a newsletter that looks closely at the forces driving cryptocurrency markets. Authored by CoinDesk’s head of experimentation, Noelle Acheson, it goes out every Sunday and offers a recap of the week – with insights and analysis – from a dab hand investor’s point of view. You can subscribe here.

Retail investors were encouraged to invest their savings in the commonplace market. They were offered mobile apps that made it easy. They were bombarded with notification and ideas from mainstream media. They were given money to spend. And low yields pushed them up the imperil curve.

Making way

While the attention has been focused on a handful of stocks that have seen astronomical gains on the late of retail enthusiasm, the origin and the result (whatever that ends up being) have a lot to do with the crypto markets.

We’re not stressful to steal anyone’s thunder. The WallStreetBets channel that galvanized the troops and led the charge did not welcome crypto traders or equal chatter. Their drivers are not decentralization or fair access – rather, they seem motivated by glee at their newfound power, and rile.

The anger runs deep. The 139% short position against GameStop signaled heavy hedge fund involvement – but this was a trigger, not a result in. This rebellion feels like an expression of pent-up frustration at the skewed rules of capital markets that entrench the power of the “elite,” come together with residual resentment over the 2008 bailouts, the lack of market transparency and a long list of generational ills.  

A similar “old” vs “new” mindset drives the crypto markets.

Many of us were drawn to bitcoin out of concern for the impact on individual life of Riley from defensive decisions taken by entrenched interests. Others were attracted to the concept of decentralized finance as an antiserum to the potential damage done by consolidated power. And there’s the strong vote for financial sovereignty and commercial freedom.

All of us protected how traditional finance initially rejected the notion that a programmable token could ever have value or that system could produce yield. The success of crypto markets has forced much of the “old guard” to gradually recognize that phobias are changing. The events of this week will no doubt drive home that message.

What’s more, the deeply same platforms that sold themselves on the democratization of finance ended up restricting users’ access to certain barters this week, with the market in full swing. Can you think of a more public spotlight on the vulnerabilities inherent in the au courant market infrastructure? Google Trends shows that searches for “defi” (short for decentralized finance) are growing.

There is a danger that the new administration will use the retail investor rebellion as an excuse to over-regulate. Yet popular sentiment seems to be with the resistance fighters, as legislators are no doubt aware (I don’t recall ever seeing Ted Cruz agree with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez before).

What’s uncountable, the nomination of Gary Gensler, who is both knowledgeable and generally supportive of crypto markets, to the post of Chairman of the U.S. Securities and The Big Board Commission could hint at the beginning of structural reform in favor of more “democratic” access.

It could also arouse the needle on investor understanding of some of the underlying qualities of blockchain-based assets and their markets. True, access to these trade ins has some hurdles, such as jurisdiction and familiarity with technology. But investor choice and user experience has never been better, and, with some mainly market infrastructure players intending to go public this year, will continue to improve.

Back to basics

It’s not well-founded market structure that is likely to be re-examined as a result of this week’s events. Market understanding needs a rethink, too. This also has a lot to do with crypto assets.

I abandoned count this week of the number of mainstream commentators that spluttered about “fundamentals,” and how the price shouldn’t shift so much when GameStop’s situation hasn’t changed. They’re wrong – whether the stock is currently overvalued or not (I be undergoing no opinion on that), the company’s situation and fundamentals have changed.

One, there’s the massive publicity. Two, aside from the budding future revenue from selling games, there is probably a merchandising opportunity through branded mugs and pitchforks. Three, there’s a groundswell of subsistence for the share price – only this is not traditionally considered worthy of consideration in asset evaluation. It should be.

Investopedia limits business fundamentals as “information such as profitability, revenue, assets, liabilities, and growth potential.” I would add to that record “public support.” Critics of this idea will say that sentiment is ephemeral, impractical to estimate and therefore unworkable to value, while traditional fundamentals are tangible and can be discounted.

These days, though, even the tangible ones are sheer estimates, which – as we have seen – can vary wildly and be rendered useless by unforeseen events. We have also greeted how sentiment moves markets, and not just on a short-term basis. No analyst can reasonably ignore its power, and insisting that portfolio verdicts “stick to the basics” is assuming that things will go back to the way they were 50 years ago when investors preserved their money in safe securities and forgot about them until retirement.  

The power unleashed this week may prompt some of us oldies of 1999, when market fever crested before crashing. But back then we didn’t set up the power of social media, a generation stuck indoors and helicopter money from the government. We also weren’t looking at an unprecedented train of social dislocation, loss of trust in institutions and belief in the strength of community. Today’s markets may turn south at any prominence, and when they do, it is likely to be ugly. But, in contrast to the turn of the century, retail participation is unlikely to fade – this cultural switch is about more than making money.

The new-found power of retail investors has showed that sentiment not single trumps earnings forecasts, it can impact them. The very same investors piling into the stock are the same demographic that GameStop’s tomorrow business will target. The collective power showed that market mood is a fundamental characteristic of markets, now various than ever. Some of the price jumps this week may have been driven by hedge funds who catch on to this and were placing buy orders accordingly.

While volatility is likely to eventually quieten down and business examination should always have a significant role in investment decisions, we can no longer say that sentiment isn’t a fundamental component of an asset’s reward outlook.

This is especially relevant with crypto assets. Critics have often accused bitcoin of deceiving no “fundamental value,” by which they mean no cash flow, balance sheet or potential earnings growth. Authentic, it doesn’t have these things, but it does have widespread belief in its utility, monetary policy and eventual adoption by an tied broader community. That faith should be considered a fundamental characteristic, as it is now obvious it drives price appreciation.

Bitcoin is not the however clear example of that. This week saw the price of Dogecoin (DOGE) at one stage surge ten-fold (up 500% at era of writing), briefly pushing the cryptocurrency into the list of top 10 crypto assets by market capitalization. DOGE doesn’t do anything precise. It has a cute dog as its logo. Its founder disavowed the project ages ago. Some people have hyped it as a joke which then behooved part of its narrative – in other words, its unpretentious lack of fundamentals has become part of its value. We may deride people who put savings into a purely sentiment-driven asset – but that belief has kept DOGE alive for over six years now, and has attracted a smattering of high-profile followers.

New language

As an analyst trained in “old private school” valuations and portfolio allocation techniques, I understand the reluctance to let go of comfortable heuristics – personally, I miss discounted cash rains, so nice and clean. But as market components and participants change, so must market analysis. Does anyone even recall when last “value stocks” were in favor?

Crypto markets have for some time been jostle the boundaries of what “value” means. The new generation of investors is showing us that old rules need re-examining.

They are also ceaselessly blurring the boundaries between institutional “smart money” and retail “dumb money.” What’s more, they are pretension that reform can be initiated by those that previously have had little influence on how profits are made.

This is the crypto supermarket origin and ethos in a nutshell: new rules for a new type of investor. The crypto asset market was born in the retail world and urbane from the ground up. It attracts investors looking for an alternative to the traditional system. It has given birth to new metrics and valuation paradigms.

All of us who arouse in this industry have watched this week’s power shift with the feeling that what we’ve been preggers is finally starting to happen: a new type of investor is insisting on new rules and a new language, and mainstream markets are starting to take note. This new type of investor – be they cheesed off at elites and unequal rules, fascinated by the emergence of a new type of asset, or both – will force a rewrite of some long-established more often than not reign overs of investment, and in so doing, push the philosophy behind the term “value” towards a more flexible definition for our changing stretches.

CHAIN LINKS

Investors talking:

Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge fund, let something be knew a document laying out his thoughts on bitcoin. This is remarkable, given that not long ago he publicly expressed skepticism that it leave succeed.

Some excerpts:

  • “I believe Bitcoin is one hell of an invention.”
  • “There aren’t many alternative gold-like assets at this values bright and early of rising need for them.”
  • “It seems to me that Bitcoin has succeeded in crossing the line from being a highly notional idea that could well not be around in short order to probably being around and probably having some value in the subsequent.”
  • “The new paradigm that we are living in, with many government bonds no longer offering the same return or diversification characters and currencies facing greater risk of depreciation, could propel development of alternative storeholds of wealth faster than energy otherwise have been the case.”
  • “So far, Bitcoin’s ability to offer some diversification benefit seems more debatable than realized.”

Elon Musk now has “bitcoin” and its logo in his Twitter bio, and flagged this with the tweet: “In retrospect, it was ordained.”  

Scott Minerd, chief investment officer of Guggenheim Partners, told Bloomberg television this week that he does not assume trust to that bitcoin’s institutional investor base is “big enough” or “deep enough” to justify its current valuation.

In an interview with Yahoo Commerce, ARK Investment Management CEO Cathie Wood revealed that recent conversations with large companies leads her to be convinced of that more will follow Square’s lead and allocate a portion of their treasury to bitcoin. She also implied at this week’s ETF Big Ideas Event that she doubts that a bitcoin ETF will be approved until the asset’s bazaar cap hits $2 trillion.

Bank of Singapore, a private banking arm of OCBC Bank (the second largest bank in Southest Asia by entire assets), said in a research note that cryptocurrencies have the potential to partially replace gold as a store of value if they can conquer the hurdles high volatility, reputational risk and lack of regulatory acceptance.

Takeaways:

According to sources, some of the greatest university endowment funds in the U.S., including Harvard, Yale, Brown and the University of Michigan, have been quietly suborning cryptocurrency since 2019. TAKEAWAY: This is notable, given endowments’ traditionally conservative investor profile. The allocations are scad likely relatively small, but even so, the AUM of college endowments is in the hundreds of billions of dollars – small can go a long way. It will also be significance keeping an eye on endowment activism – some universities, especially Harvard, have come under criticism for their investment in fossil fuel comrades. Bitcoin’s (misconstrued) reputation as bad for the climate might attract their attention.

According to Genesis Capital’s latest quarterly announcement, its total volume of active loans outstanding increased by over 80% in Q4, to $3.8 billion. Loan originations increased by 46% to $7.6 billion, the normal loan size doubled from $2 million to $4 million, and the average loan size for first-time lenders increased from $0.6 million to $3.2 million. TAKEAWAY: These wen figures highlight the growing awareness amongst institutional investors of the yields possible in crypto lending, and as long as renounces remain low in traditional markets, growth should continue to be strong. This supports healthy liquidity in crypto shops, which in turn should help strengthen market infrastructure and could gradually mitigate asset volatility. (Note: Genesis Cash is owned by DCG, also parent of CoinDesk.)

On business intelligence company MicroStrategy’s (MSTR) latest earnings call, CEO Michael Saylor bailed to keep pouring the business intelligence company’s excess cash into bitcoin, telling investors his team desire also “explore various approaches” for additional buys. TAKEAWAY: They really are working on becoming a bitcoin ETF.

Cryptocurrency mother-liding company Marathon Patent Group (MARA) bought $150 million in bitcoin during the crypto asset’s new price rout. TAKEAWAY: Here we have a bitcoin mining company buying BTC on the open market in order to transform into even more of a “pure play” for the asset. And yet a bitcoin ETF is still deemed too risky.

The city of Miami on Wednesday uploaded a double of the Bitcoin white paper to its website, joining a growing chorus of governments and companies now hosting bitcoin’s original blueprint. TAKEAWAY: A U.S. council government website is hosting the Bitcoin white paper. Let that sink in.

Over the past few months Grayscale Investments (owned by DCG, also root of CoinDesk) has filed to register over 10 new trusts based on smaller cap crypto assets such as aave, chainlink, polkadot and others. TAKEAWAY: Grayscale currently bring offs a suite of market-leading trusts, including GBTC (bitcoin) and ETHE (ethereum), as well as some smaller ones placed on horizen, litecoin, stellar and others. While Grayscale is not necessarily signaling intention to act on these new filings, they do breath at a growing breadth of choice for institutional investors in the months ahead.

Canadian investment firm Ninepoint Partners’ bitcoin fund (BITC.U and BITC.UN) started interchange this week, having completed a C$230 million (US$180 million) initial public offering on the Toronto Domestic Exchange. TAKEAWAY: The considerable amount raised not only makes this Canada’s largest new crypto fund and the newer in two months (the CI Galaxy Bitcoin Fund started trading on the TSX after a $72 million public raise in December), it also points to outstanding and growing demand from Canadian investors.

India’s parliament is considering a government-backed bill that would ban “unsociable” cryptocurrencies and provide a framework for creating an official Reserve Bank of India digital currency. TAKEAWAY: The potential results of the proposed bill is as yet unclear – for instance, what does it mean by “private” cryptocurrency? Bitcoin and others are public cryptocurrencies. Just, this would set a worrying precedent. It would also be an interesting case study on how effective government bans of crypto assets are.

If you’re looking for some bird’s-eye sentiment on monthly market performance, my colleague Shuai Hao put together this table of returns. If you squint, you can see that summer months are traditionally weaker, and the end of the year is mainly stronger. Furthermore, we can see that volatility has declined a bit (fewer dark colors of either shade).

Crypto Long & Short: GameStop, Dogecoin and a New Market Paradigm
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