The Investment Case for Bitcoin

I made an appearance on Retire Japan TV on 22 January. It was a delightful conversation and many thanks to Ben and Daniel for having me on. In particular, much respect to Ben for tackling the subject of crypto, which he is by no means a believer in! I don’t think I convinced him, but hopefully, I somewhat demystified the idea of crypto, and Bitcoin in particular, as an investment asset.

I have spent the last 6 years learning about and experiencing crypto. Whenever I talk to people who have not been paying much attention, I have to remind myself that they have many misconceptions that I dispelled long ago. Watching the video back, I inevitably found a few parts that I could have explained better, but I think I covered the main points I wanted to hit:

Bitcoin not crypto – I can’t really stress this enough. If you are new to the asset class and you don’t yet have a basic understanding of Bitcoin and its four-year halving cycle, you should not be diving into altcoins. You will get rekt, which is a technical term by the way! The Bitcoin four-year cycle drives all of the price action in crypto. Get a little Bitcoin first, learn about it, and then explore other crypto assets if you are comfortable.

Go forth and diversify! – we touched on Harry Markowitz and efficient frontiers. I have covered this in a post on Asset Allocation. I also wrote a post back in 2018 on Diversifying Through Crypto. With Bitcoin, we are talking about an asset that is only moderately correlated to traditional asset classes. Non-correlation is the name of the game if you are looking for better returns without significantly increasing risk. If you only own stocks, you are not diversified. If you own stocks plus Bitcoin, now you are a little more diversified. Really you need to own a little of every asset class. Diversification becomes more and more important as the amount of capital you have grows bigger, and also as you get closer to spending it. Most people are not diversified enough. Read Ray Dalio, folks!

You are being robbed! – we are not just talking about a little bit of healthy, organic inflation here. Central banks have been printing money and inflating their balance sheets knowing that in the end, it’s the public who will pay for it. When the system makes money, it’s capitalism. And when the system creates a big hole, it’s time for some socialism. The next book on my reading list is Broken Money by Lyn Alden. Ben made the point that other investment assets like stocks and real estate offer protection against inflation, and they absolutely do, but good luck exchanging a fraction of your house to buy goods and services. The difference here is that Bitcoin is a form of money and it is programmed to be deflationary. In my opinion, it will outperform the debasement of Fiat money over time better than stocks or property.

Basic economics – I took a few economics classes back in university. I wish I had been more interested at the time. The first thing that was covered was supply and demand. It is fundamental. Fixed supply with increasing demand = number go up! Jurrien Timmer at Fidelity is an essential follow for understanding the properties of Bitcoin and how it relates to other asset classes. Read up on Metclafe’s Law and network effects. We are talking about a network here.

Misconceptions

There are too many misconceptions about Bitcoin to count. The biggest one is that someone could just make another one. Folks, we’re talking about an asset with a $785 billion market cap. Good luck making a new one that’s going to knock it off its perch. Nobody in crypto is trying to do that. The race for the underlying store of value in the space is over.

That doesn’t mean all the other coins are not investable. Some are better than others and they are simply built to do different things. But that’s a whole new essay that I don’t have time for here.

As for the idea that only a handful of people own most of the Bitcoin. That was a new one on me but it’s simply not true. There’s a great report on that by Grayscale here. Also, if you are looking to figure out what’s going on in the network, Glassnode is an amazing tool. Check out their 2023 Yearly On-chain Review.

I could go on, there are so many misconceptions. Hell, China has banned Bitcoin multiple times. So no one in China owns BTC right?

Integration into traditional finance

The rallying call of crypto folk used to be ‘We’re still early!’. Judging by how little the average person understands the asset class, I think that’s still true, but it is getting less so. A few years ago, Larry Fink, the CEO of Blackrock, was decrying crypto as a tool only used by criminals to launder money and finance terrorism. It’s a familiar refrain from those who feel threatened by the emergence of a system that competes with the one that made them rich. (We see you too, Jamie Dimon) Now Larry has a spot Bitcoin ETF and is on Bloomberg and CNN saying that all financial assets will end up tokenised on the blockchain. Stocks, bonds, the whole shebang. We’re not so early any more.

Of course, a Bitcoin ETF is a tradfi product. You can’t exit it in Bitcoin, only in dollars. But for Japan residents, that does mean it gets taxed as capital gains, not income.

Other resources

The first time I looked at Bitcoin was in early 2017. My friend came back from a conference and said “We need to buy Bitcoin!” and handed me a report called ‘How to position for the rally in Bitcoin’, which was actually published in 2015 by Adamant Research. I read that and thought he was probably right. Adamant is still publishing analysis and their latest report is called ‘How to position for the Bitcoin boom’. You can find all their analysis here.

I mentioned Microstrategy on Retire Japan TV. Their Bitcoin dashboard is quite something and can be used to compare Bitcoin returns to other assets.

So there you have it. Not content with being allowed to talk for an hour, I have now written a post to further clarify my thoughts.

The halving is in April. I would expect a couple of months of sideways chop in crypto prices, maybe even a big juicy drawdown. That’s all part of the ride. Check in on me in 12-18 months!

Disclaimer: This should go without saying, but the information contained in this blog is not investment advice, or an incentive to invest, and should not be considered as such. This is for information only.


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