Corporations and institutional investors seeking an alternate store of
value amid the pandemic crisis drove crypto to new heights in 2020.
The COVID-19 pandemic
dominated the news in 2020, affecting myriad sectors — health,
economics, social justice, politics and trade, as well as the
cryptocurrency and blockchain industry. As country after country locked
down to halt the virus’s spread, governments seized upon stimulus
payments to preserve economic life.
While necessary, these
measures raised the specter of global inflation. This, in turn, pushed
many traditional investors and institutions to take a new look at
cryptocurrencies as an alternate store of value, especially Bitcoin (BTC),
the top crypto. Following a March 11 dip, BTC went on a tear, reaching
record levels by year end. With that as a backdrop, here are 2020’s top
10 stories of the crypto and blockchain world.
Bitcoin soars to record heights
The
world’s oldest and most widely held cryptocurrency shattered price
records and then some in 2020. Now, at the end of the year, Bitcoin’s
market cap is standing at about $500 billion — surpassing Visa and
Berkshire Hathaway — and its price on spot markets continues to inch toward $30,000.
The
pre-rally record high of $19,850 was set in December 2017 by retail
traders in Asia (many of which just discovering cryptocurrencies)
driving the price, but this year, it was by mature investors
continuously purchasing increments of Bitcoin and often holding it
off-chain as a long-term investment, as the New York Times noted.
“We’re
seeing fresh stories about institutional crypto adoption on almost a
daily basis at this point,” Bitcoin Depot CEO Brandon Mintz told Cointelegraph
in mid-December. MicroStrategy, Square, Paul Tudor Jones, Guggenheim
Investors and even venerable insurance company MassMutual were among
those purchasing BTC in 2020. “We are being driven by corporations and
billionaires now, not just retailers,” said Minerd.
Decentralized finance bursts forth
“2020
was unequivocally the year of decentralized finance,” declared Da
Hongfe, the co-founder of the Smart Economy network, in a Cointelegraph op-ed.
True to that, the amount locked in DeFi had soared to almost $15
billion on Dec. 30, compared with only $658 million at the beginning of
the year, according to DeFi Pulse.
Indeed, a new term, “yield farming,” entered the crypto lexicon. In return for staking one’s BTC or Ether (ETH) as collateral with a DeFi firm, a user might receive a governance token enabling the holder to “debate, propose, and vote on all changes to the [platform’s] protocol.”
Ownership
of these governance tokens became quite lucrative in 2020. First issued
in June, Compound’s COMP rose in value from $61 on June 18 to $382 on
June 21 following its launch on United States exchange Coinbase Pro. It is closing the year at $148 on Dec. 31, 2020.
DeFi is a “game changer,” Giuseppe Ateniese, a professor at the Stevens Institute of Technology, previously told Cointelegraph.
“With decentralized finance, there’s no human in the loop, no server,
no organization. There’s no bias.” It isn’t like a traditional car loan,
where if the borrower defaults, the bank goes after the car seeking
repossession, he explained. “With DeFi, assets are digital and
locked/committed through smart contracts. If I don’t pay the loan back,
the digital asset that I used as collateral is taken, and there is
nothing I can do about it.”
PayPal deals in crypto
It took Bitcoin 12 years to gain 100 million users.
Then, in a single month, the network additionally gained a potential
300 million more users as payments giant PayPal announced it would allow users to buy, sell and hold Bitcoin, Ether, Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Litecoin (LTC).
“It’s already having a huge impact,” declared
Pantera Capital in November. “Within four weeks of going live, PayPal
is already buying almost 70% of the new supply of bitcoins.” The
following month, Pantera updated: “Within two months of going live,
PayPal is already buying more than 100% of the new supply of bitcoins.”
Bitcoin survives quadrennial halving
Bitcoin
halvings, designed to limit BTC’s issuance rate — which is capped at 21
million units — occur roughly every four years, and they are typically
marked by some anxiousness. They are analogous to a company telling its
workers to expect a 50% pay cut. Here, it is the block reward for the
Bitcoin network’s validators, known as miners, that is sliced in half.
The
May 2020 halving reduced miners’ block reward from 12.5 BTC to 6.25
BTC, and it came and went without calamity — no exodus of miners or
collapse in the network’s computing power (hash rate), as some had feared. Seven months later, Bitcoin is selling at roughly three times its pre-halving level ($8,566 on May 11).
China tests, but The Bahamas launches world’s first CBDC
The
race to issue the first central bank digital currency, or CBDC, at
scale moved closer to resolution in 2020, with China’s August
announcement of a trial run of its digital yuan
in four city hubs — Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and Hong Kong — a test
area with 400 million people, or about 29% of the country’s population.
Many anticipated China’s digital currency electronic payment
(DCEP) project would soon achieve full rollout, but disagreements arose
as to its significance. Would a digital yuan challenge the U.S. dollar
as the world’s reserve currency, as the Financial Times feared? The
publication wrote
in August: “China’s rapid development of a central bank digital
currency has the potential to upset the global monetary order.”
Or are CBDCs still so riddled with unsolved problems, such as fraud prevention and cyber attacks, that launching one now at scale would be irresponsible, as United States Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell implied in October?
In
any case, China will not have the world’s first CBDC. That distinction
belongs to The Bahamas, an island nation in the West Indies that made
history on Oct. 20 with the official launch of its central bank digital currency, the so-called Sand Dollar, built on a blockchain platform.
MicroStrategy goes all in on BTC
2020
was the year publicly owned corporations and institutional investors
started to move the crypto needle, and no listed company embraced crypto
with quite the fervor as MicroStrategy, a Nasdaq-listed business
intelligence firm. Not only had it accumulated $250 million in Bitcoin
by August, but it made BTC its primary corporate reserve treasury.
As CEO Michael Saylor explained,
unprecedented government stimulus measures undertaken to combat the
COVID-19 crisis were expected to have a “significant depreciating effect
on the long-term real value of fiat currencies and many other
conventional asset types, including those traditionally held as part of
corporate treasury operations.” In this new world, Bitcoin is a
dependable store of value “with more long-term appreciation potential
than holding cash.”
MicroStrategy continued to purchase BTC
through the year, and in late 2020, it raised $650 million through the
sale of convertible notes to buy even more Bitcoin. As of Dec. 21, the
company held a total of 70,470 BTC, purchased at an average price of $15,964 per Bitcoin. The Wall Street Journal marvelled at the firm’s transformation, asking: “Is this a publicly traded company or is it a hedge fund?"
Coinbase probes IPO waters
In
December, exchange Coinbase announced a bid to become the first
crypto-native corporation to be listed on a major U.S. stock exchange.
The 35-million-customer company could be valued at $28 billion, according to research firm Messari, if its initial public offering comes to fruition.
“It
is a massive event,” Vladimir Vishnevskiy, director and co-founder of
Swiss wealth management firm St. Gotthard Fund Management AG, told
Cointelegraph, and not only in the U.S. but in Europe too, because “the IPO will provide a marker in terms of how markets are ready to value such companies.”
The IPO is a “milestone for the crypto industry,” noted Fortune magazine.
“It’s far from clear, however, whether the United States Securities and
Exchange Commission would sign off on such an arrangement.” Coinbase
stirred some controversy in 2020 for discouraging employees from
political activism in the workplace, and in November, the New York Times
reported that some of Coinbase’s black employees had voiced concerns of discriminatory treatment. Others noted the exchange was still plagued by untimely service outages during times of high price volatility.
Even so, the IPO announcement is a major event,
said University of Texas finance professor John Griffin, “showing that
the path of Coinbase to work within the regulatory process is an
economically profitable one.”
Telegram Group abandons TON project
Telegram
Group Inc. had sought to build a decentralized blockchain platform
along the lines of Bitcoin and Ethereum — only better, that is, “vastly
superior to them in speed and scalability,” according
to Pavel Durov, founder and CEO of the open-source encrypted messenger
service firm, with some 300 million users globally. But Telegram failed to overcome resistance from the SEC and pulled the plug on its TON (Telegram Open Network) project in May.
The
Dubai-based firm had already raised $1.7 billion to launch the
project’s “Grams” token, but the SEC deemed the coins to be unregistered
securities and moved to halt their distribution — not just in the U.S.
but anywhere in the world. A federal court gave the agency preliminary
support.
“We are still dependent on the United States when it comes to finance and technology,” wrote
Durov in a blog, adding: “This may change in the future. But today, we
are in a vicious circle: you can’t bring more balance to an overly
centralized world exactly because it’s so centralized.” Telegram
had the participation of a number of prominent investors, including
blue-chip venture capital firms Kleiner Perkins and Sequoia Capital.
Investor Paul Tudor Jones endorses BTC
COVID-related
government stimulus efforts had many investors worried about inflation
in 2020, and some were willing to give cryptocurrencies a fresh view as
an alternate store of value. Prominent among them was Paul Tudor Jones, a
hedge fund investor who reported in May that a portion of his assets
was now invested in Bitcoin.
The endorsement of a celebrated investor like Jones — who predicted the 1987 stock market crash — paved the way for mainstream investors
and others to become involved in crypto. “Making the case for Bitcoin
as his preferred hedge against what he [Jones] calls ‘the great monetary
inflation’ has significantly reduced ‘career risk’ for many of his
peers considering an allocation to Bitcoin,” Bitwise Asset Management’s
David Lawant previously told Cointelegraph. The Wall Street Journal also commented:
“The
[Bitcoin] rally has attracted a wide cast of characters, from the Wall
Street billionaires Paul Tudor Jones and Stanley Druckenmiller to
momentum investors who aim to ride winning assets higher and losing
markets lower. Their participation, in turn, has fueled more buying.”
Declaring XRP a security, SEC sues Ripple
The XRP
token was the third-largest cryptocurrency by market value — trailing
only Bitcoin and Ether — when in late December the San Francisco-based
firm ran into a buzzsaw in the form of the SEC.
Led by outgoing chairman Jay Clayton, the commission filed
legal action against Ripple and its top-two executives, alleging that
the XRP coin created by Ripple was in fact a security, and that the firm
had raised over $1.3 billion through an unregistered, ongoing digital
asset securities offering. In the three days following the announcement,
XRP’s price plummeted 41%, and it became unclear whether the firm would survive in its present form.
On Dec. 27, Coinbase, the largest U.S. exchange, announced that it would suspend XRP trading,
and with others delisting the token, the climate around the coin has
become increasingly unstable. On Dec. 29, Grayscale Investments, the
world’s largest digital asset manager, reportedly liquidated more than 9.18 million in XRP.
Ripple denounced the SEC’s action
as “an attack on the entire crypto industry here in the United States”
as the company’s CEO Brad Garlinghouse stated that he would continue to
support its customers in the U.S. and globally.
More clarity in 2021?
All
in all, corporations and institutional investors seeking an alternate
store of value amid the ongoing COVID-19 crisis propelled crypto to
record levels in 2020. Elsewhere, blockchain innovation continued on
several fronts, including decentralized finance and CBDC development.
In
the U.S., a wary SEC stymied digital token expansion, launching
lawsuits against XRP and Telegram’s TON. A change of administration in
Washington, including new SEC leadership, however, could bring more
regulatory clarity in 2021.
source link : https://cointelegraph.com/news/top-10-crypto-and-blockchain-stories-of-2020