The past week has been another blockbuster for bitcoin: The cryptocurrency cleared the $60,000 milestone last weekend and has been bolstered by news from major banks.
Morgan Stanley
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And now another major financial institution joins the chorus. Deutsche Bank
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With a $1 trillion market capitalization, bitcoin
BTCUSD,
But the economist said the real debate is whether the evolution of bitcoin into its own asset class can come from valuations alone, because low liquidity remains a key obstacle. Just compare it to Apple
AAPL,
This is feeding into the ultra-volatility of bitcoin, said the Deutsche Bank analyst. Only a few additional large purchases or market exits are needed to “significantly impact the supply-demand equilibrium,” according to Laboure.
The value of bitcoin will remain volatile, and continue to rise and fall depending on what people believe it is worth, in what is known as the “Tinkerbell Effect,” said Laboure. This is an economic term that describes how something is likelier to happen when more people believe in it, and is named after Peter Pan’s claim that the fairy Tinkerbell exists because children believe she does.
In fact, bitcoin is like Tesla
TSLA,
Tesla’s stock market valuation prices in the significant shift in the automotive world toward electric vehicles, and hypothesizes that Tesla will be the absolute leader in that market.
Bitcoin’s total value is around 102% of the yen in circulation, 65% of the euros, 53% of the U.S. dollars, and 904% more than the amount of British pounds, according to Laboure, but the average number of bitcoins exchanged daily represents only around 0.06% of British pounds in circulation.
If the crypto’s current valuation is here to stay, the shift toward cross-border digital currencies will have to come in force, according to Laboure — and bitcoin must lead the charge in becoming the means of payment for the future.
The buzz
In the first face-to-face meeting between senior U.S. and Chinese officials since President Joe Biden was elected, Beijing will pressure the U.S. to reverse many of the tough-on-China policies introduced by the Trump presidency, The Wall Street Journal reported.
On the economic front, all eyes are looking at jobs. It is expected that initial jobless claims last week totaled 700,000, down from 712,000 in the week prior. The data are due at 8:30 a.m. Eastern, along with continuing jobless claims and the manufacturing survey from the Philadelphia Federal Reserve. At 10 a.m., the Index of Leading Economic Indicators for February is due.
And in case you missed it, here’s what we did and didn’t learn from Jerome Powell’s press conference on Wednesday. Following the two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting, the Fed Chair said the central bank intends to be dovish until the data indicate otherwise.
Apple plans to announce new iPads next month, at the earliest, with a processor to rival the faster M1 chip in the latest MacBook Pros, according to a report from Bloomberg.
The European Union’s medical regulator will report on its investigation into the risk of blood clots associated with the COVID-19 vaccine developed by drug company AstraZeneca
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The markets
Stock market futures are mixed
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European stocks
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The chart
Superhigh levels of stock market leverage represent just another sign “that the zoo has gone nuts,” says Wolf Richter of the popular Wolf Street financial blog, who has our chart of the day.
The amount that individuals and institutions borrow against their holdings is called margin debt, and it is a key indicator of stock market leverage tracked monthly. Margin debt surged by a record $154 billion over the past four months to historic highs, topping $813 billion in February.
Random reads
High valuations everywhere: A 15th century bowl found at a yard sale, highlighted by Need To Know earlier this month when it was valued at up to $500,000, just sold for nearly $722,000.
Not medal-worthy: Tokyo Olympics ceremonies chief resigns over sexist ‘Olympig’ remark.
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