Institutional Investors Will Play A Big Role in Cryptocurrencies in 2018

In contradistinction to the stock market, which is seeing its eight-year bull run thanks, partially, to institutional investors, crypto-markets are dominated by single investors. This is evident by almost every metric.

Crypto-exchanges, which are refuges for singular investors, are shocked. Popular crypto-exchange, Binance recently showed that they added 250,000 new users in a single day. Kraken is onboarding 50,000 new accounts daily and they are logging an astonishing 10,000 new support tickets every day. In a blog post, Kraken developers wrote:


“The recent unexpected explosion in demand has been overwhelming.”


Some exchanges including Binance, Bitfinex and CEX.io have temporally halted new account registrations so that they can update their technology and better prepare their platforms for the rush of single investors filling the market. (ред.)

Furthermore, the most anticipated Bitcoin futures contracts are also being dominated by singular investors. In accordance with The Wall Street Journal:


“In a sign of how more conservative firms are keeping their distance, the CFTC data show near-zero trading in Cboe’s Bitcoin futures by banks and asset managers.”


 

Institutional money is on its way

There is eternal speculation about a crypto-bubble. Whenever prices begin to shift, or the famously impermanent crypto-market hesitates, pundits are quick to announce the bubble burst and the movement over. When cryptocurrencies endured a flash crash before Christmas, commentators filled the internet with their crypto post-mortems. Of course, most prices recovered within a single day.

In reality, the crypto-party isn’t rounding off. It’s just getting started.

Institutional money is on its way, and when that happens, digital currency values will receive a significant boost. Even JP Morgan Chase CEO and infamous crypto-skeptic, Jamie Dimon, recently expressed regret for describing Bitcoin as cheating. In an interview with Fox Business, Dimon confirmed that “the Blockchain is real.” He went on to express support for cryptocurrencies that represent traditional currencies like dollars and yen.

Dimon’s comments were made as CNBC reported that altcoin Ripple has more than 100 customers from the mainstream banking industry using its XRP token. On

January 11th, MoneyGram signed on to test Ripple’s XRP token as a digital way for sending money. Ripple’s price rose 25% after the news before retreating later that day.

The expanding possibilities for institutional investment

As Blockchain use-cases become more spread, expect increased institutional investment in cryptocurrency markets.

In October, The Wall Street Journal reported that investment juggernaut Goldman Sachs is considering offering a Bitcoin-related investment product. In comments to the Journal, a Goldman spokesman said:


“In response to client interest in digital currencies, we are exploring how best to serve them in this space.”


In the end, individual interest spurs institutional interest, and that will have a considerable influence on the value of digital currencies.

Bitcoin futures contracts on Chicago based exchanges run by CME Group and Cboe Group represent expanding opportunities for institutional investment. Concretely, they indicate that most expected crypto-ETF funds may soon be available for investors. Furthermore, according to estimates by Morgan Stanley, in 2017 hedge funds invested more than $2 billion in crypto-related assets. This is a lot of money, but it’s a small percentage of the possible investment.

In a word, Bitcoin hedge funds are counting their gain in thousands of percent and institutional investors can’t stay away forever.

Since digital currencies continue to gain exposure, they are proving surprisingly steady to investors’ worst fears. Technology is rapidly improving, and many of the same functions and warranties currently maintaining traditional investment markets are increasingly present in crypto-markets as well.

Despite the total crypto market cap is vast, it’s far from its full potential. Cryptocurrencies are just now becoming household names, and they are still shedding some of our prejudices that stigmatized investment. But the real growth driver will be institutional investments, which will be spurred on by the singular investors who want to take part in crypto markets through institutional platforms and by the market forces that make the possibility of significant profits too substantial to pass up.

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