Bitcoin catapulted above US$100,000 for the first time on Thursday (Dec 5), a milestone hailed even by sceptics as a coming of age for digital assets as investors bet on a friendly US administration to cement the place of cryptocurrencies in financial markets.
Once it broke US$100,000 in Thursday’s Asian morning, boosted by US president-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of pro-crypto Paul Atkins to run the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), it was soon at an all-time high of US$103,619, a surge of about 6 per cent on the day. It was last fetching US$102,650.
The total value of the cryptocurrency market has almost doubled over the year so far to hit a record just shy of US$3.8 trillion, according to data provider CoinGecko. By comparison, Apple alone is worth about US$3.7 trillion.
Bitcoin’s march from the libertarian fringe to Wall Street has minted millionaires, a new asset class and popularised the concept of “decentralised finance” in a volatile and often controversial period since its creation 16 years ago.
Bitcoin has more than doubled in value this year, and is up more than 50 per cent in the four weeks since Trump’s sweeping election victory, which also saw a slew of pro-crypto lawmakers being elected to Congress.
“We’re witnessing a paradigm shift,” said Mike Novogratz, founder and CEO of US crypto firm Galaxy Digital.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
“Bitcoin and the entire digital asset ecosystem are on the brink of entering the financial mainstream – this momentum is fuelled by institutional adoption, advancements in tokenisation and payments, and a clearer regulatory path.”
Trump embraced digital assets during his campaign, promising to make the US the “crypto capital of the planet” and accumulate a national stockpile of Bitcoin.
“We were trading basically sideways for about seven months, then immediately after Nov 5, US investors resumed buying hand over fist,” said Joe McCann, CEO and founder of Asymmetric, a Miami digital assets hedge fund.
Bitcoin’s proponents cheered Trump’s nomination of Atkins to the SEC.
A former SEC commissioner, Atkins has been involved in crypto policy as co-chair of the Token Alliance, which works to “develop best practices for digital asset issuances and trading platforms”, and the Chamber of Digital Commerce.
“Atkins will offer a new perspective, anchored by a deep understanding of the digital asset ecosystem,” said Blockchain Association CEO Kristin Smith.
“We look forward to working with him… and ushering in – together – a new wave of American crypto innovation.”
A slew of crypto companies including Ripple, Kraken and Circle are also jostling for a seat on Trump’s promised crypto advisory council.
Part of the landscape
Bitcoin has proven a survivor through precipitous downturns.
Its move into six-figure territory is a remarkable comeback from a dip below US$16,000 in 2022, when the industry was reeling from the collapse of the FTX exchange. Founder Sam Bankman-Fried was subsequently jailed.
Analysts say the growing embrace of Bitcoin by big investors this year has been a driving force behind the record-breaking rally.
US-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) were approved in January and have been a conduit for large-scale buying, with more than US$4 billion streaming into these funds since the election.
“Roughly 3 per cent of the total supply of Bitcoins that will ever exist have been purchased in 2024 by institutional money,” said Geoff Kendrick, global head of digital assets research at Standard Chartered.
“Digital assets, as an asset class, is becoming normalised,” he said. “If you fast forward a number of years on trading floors, you’ll have a sales and trading desk… which will sit alongside FX and rates and commodities.”
It is already becoming increasingly financialised, with the launch of Bitcoin futures in 2017 and a strong debut for options on BlackRock’s ETF in November.
Crypto-related stocks have soared along with the Bitcoin price, with shares in Bitcoin miner Mara Holdings and exchange operator Coinbase each up around 65 per cent in November.
Software firm MicroStrategy, which has repeatedly raised funds to buy Bitcoin and held an aggregate of about 402,100 Bitcoins as of Dec 1, has gained around 540 per cent this year.
Trump himself unveiled a new crypto business, World Liberty Financial, in September, although details have been scarce, and billionaire Elon Musk, a major Trump ally, is also a proponent of cryptocurrencies.
“Who can prohibit it?”
The cryptocurrency industry has been criticised for its massive energy usage, while crypto crime remains a concern, and the underlying technology is yet to deliver a major revolution in the way money moves around the globe.
The US and Britain announced on Wednesday they had disrupted what they described as a global money laundering ring, which used cryptocurrency to help rich Russians to evade sanction and launder cash for drug traffickers.
Still, as Russian President Vladimir Putin pointed out at an investment conference on Wednesday: “Who can prohibit it? No one.” And its longevity is perhaps testament to a degree of resilience.
“As time goes by, it’s proving itself as part of the financial landscape,” said Shane Oliver, chief economist and head of investment strategy at AMP in Sydney.
“I find it very hard to value it… it’s anyone’s guess. But it does have a momentum aspect to it, and at the moment, the momentum is up.” REUTERS