Bitcoin’s vertiginous ascent showed no signs of abating on Monday, with
the cryptocurrency soaring to another record high just a few percent
away from $10,000 after gaining more than a fifth in value over the past
three days alone.
The digital currency has seen an eye-watering
tenfold increase in its value since the start of the year and has more
than doubled in value since the beginning of October, lifted by the
prospect of crossing over into the financial mainstream, amid a flurry
of crypto-hedge fund launches.
It surged as much as 4.5 percent on Monday to trade at $9,721 on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange BTC=BTSP, before easing back to around $9,600 by 1155 GMT.
Data
compiled by Alistair Milne, the Monaco-based manager of the Altana
Digital Currency Fund, showed U.S. bitcoin wallet provider Coinbase
added 300,000 users between Wednesday and Sunday, during the U.S.
Thanksgiving holiday. The total number of Coinbase users globally now
stands at 13.3 million.
“The Coinbase data is evidence that
adoption is not slowing down,” Milne told Reuters. “Breaking $10,000
seems inevitable following the recent price action.”
Bitcoin’s price has been helped in recent months by
the announcement that the world’s biggest derivatives exchange operator
CME Group would start offering bitcoin futures. The company said last
week the futures would launch by the end of the year though no precise
date had been set.
So far, institutional
investors have largely stayed away from the market, viewing it as too
volatile, too risky and too complex to invest other people’s money into.
But some say the launch of the CME futures could lure in more
mainstream investors.
“Promises of bitcoin futures opening the
door to institutional money are supercharging the price,” said Charles
Hayter, founder of cryptocurrency data analysis website Cryptocompare.
BIGGER THAN WAL-MART
The latest price surge brought
bitcoin’s “market cap” - its price multiplied by the number of coins
that have been released into the system - to more than $163 billion,
according to industry website Coinmarketcap.
The market cap of all cryptocurrencies, meanwhile,
topped $300 billion for the first time, the site said, making their
estimated market value greater than that of Wal-Mart.
The
staggering price increases seen in the crypto-market have led to
multiple warnings from central bankers, investment bankers and other
investors that it has reached bubble territory.
Some
say that this could prompt regulators in the West to crack down on the
market in a similar fashion to China, where bitcoin exchanges were shut
down earlier this year.
“Regulators know the
rewards of cryptocurrency and blockchain could be huge but (they) have
more than one eye on the catastrophic ramifications if good governance,
stability and control are not preserved,” said David Futter, a fintech
partner at law firm Ashurst, in London.
“If the carrot of self-regulation proves insufficient, the regulators will not hesitate to use their stick.”
Bitcoin’s
biggest rival, ether - sometimes referred to as Ethereum, the name for
the project behind it - has seen even more stratospheric gains this
year, up more than 6000 percent. It hit an all-time high just below $500
on Monday, with its market cap nearing $50 billion.
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