In brief
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed by the author are for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial, investment, or other advice.
$116,830.00
-4.24%$2,975.05
-2.43%$2.88
-3.21%$676.95
-3.82%$159.43
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0.00%$0.191289
-8.09%$0.297437
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0.04%$2.51
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0.00%$193.95
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0.03%$116,741.00
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0.03%$0.00000068
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3.00%$0.448559
5.12%$3,094.91
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4.69%$0.998292
0.03%$0.237512
5.48%$0.191205
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6.17%$0.185867
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0.00%$6.86
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1.09%$0.00002052
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0.37%$1.00
0.01%$0.078872
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-2.20%$26.01
-1.90%$126.19
-3.44%$0.333368
9.31%$0.0310149
3.56%$0.224738
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0.43%$0.792929
-15.80%$0.697353
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-2.34%$0.999236
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-0.15%$116,637.00
-4.67%$3,129.24
-1.52%$0.639849
-1.81%$1.019
-0.16%$0.476262
-6.35%Reading
Is billionaire investor Ray Dalio finally going to invest in Bitcoin after spending so long slating it? If his latest newsletter is anything to go by, it could be a possibility.
In a note published today, “What I think of Bitcoin,” Dalio, who runs the world’s biggest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, said the cryptocurrency is “one hell of an invention.” He also said that the fact that investors are still interested in the currency, 10 years after it was conceived, is “an amazing accomplishment.”
Dalio added: "... I and my colleagues at Bridgewater are intently focusing on alternative storehold of wealth assets, and Bitcoin won't escape our scrutiny."
The hedge fund manager has come a long way since he said Bitcoin was “so volatile” and therefore unsuitable as a storehold of wealth; just last year, Dalio said that governments would likely outlaw the currency.
He’s not the only one to have voiced those opinions: this week, ex-Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein said regulators are likely getting ready to control Bitcoin.
But today Dalio hinted that Bridgewater would consider investing in it—or other similar alternative assets.
“I am eager to be corrected and learn more,” the note read, after Dalio said that the asset could potentially lose 80% of its value. Nevertheless, the famed investor confirmed that Bridgewater is taking a very close look at Bitcoin as a potential alternative store of value.
Bitcoin isn’t a good alternative asset because governments will eventually outlaw it, according to billionaire investor Ray Dalio. The biggest cryptocurrency by market cap is also problematic because of its volatility and the inability to spend it on everyday goods, Dalio said in an interview with Yahoo Finance over the weekend. Dalio, who runs the world’s biggest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, said in the interview that he instead expects the world to increasingly turn to central bank di...
Dalio did add, however, that he was worried about the potential of Bitcoin hacks, saying “it would be naïve to be totally comfortable that digital assets can’t be hacked, which is one of the advantages of gold-like assets and is one of the risks of all financial assets.”
Dalio is the latest traditional finance bigwig to show interest in Bitcoin as a safe haven bet or protection against the debasement of the dollar.
Along with tech companies like PayPal and MicroStrategy, hedge funds and asset managers are keeping a close eye on, or investing, in the cryptocurrency.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed by the author are for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial, investment, or other advice.
Grayscale has confidentially submitted preliminary paperwork with U.S. regulators that could lead to the listing of its shares on the public market, the asset manager said Monday in a statement. The firm filed a draft registration statement on Form S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, according to the press release. Grayscale did not disclose the number of shares it plans to register, nor the price range for the proposed registration. Draft S-1’s are introductory filings, enabl...
Metaplanet CEO Simon Gerovich is helping to advance a Bitcoin treasury strategy campaign in Asia through a newly approved acquisition of a South Korean public firm, following a similar move in Thailand earlier this month. South Korea's SGA Co., a systems integrator serving government and education clients, has received board approval to issue more than 58 million new shares to a group led by Sora Ventures and KCGI, including Gerovich in an individual capacity. The issuance, approved by its boar...
A growing number of publicly traded companies are stockpiling digital assets in their corporate treasuries—a sign of growing interest in crypto as prices soar. But as more firms imitate software firm Strategy’s token-HODLing playbook, things have become weird. Several publicly traded companies with unorthodox operating businesses are beginning to add Bitcoin and other virtual currencies to their balance sheets. Noodle giants, love hotel operators, and telemedicine cannabis prescribers are amon...