From fringe programmer interest just 15 years ago, cryptocurrencies are now a key component of the world’s economic landscape. It has been quite a journey.
Their price remains volatile, yet the underlying security of blockchain means that they are increasingly also seen as a refuge. In part, this is because they rely on factors different from those underpinning traditional financial markets.
One of the primary drivers behind these digital assets is the confidence investors place in their decentralised nature, as well as in the blockchain technology that underpins them and the liquidity of trading platforms. Yet many still see crypto as speculative and overly sensitive to media trends and currents.
In one of his 2024 presidential election campaign speeches, Donald Trump vowed to make the United States the “world capital for crypto and Bitcoin” if he won. When he did, the crypto surge broke all records in the wave of euphoria.
Among the potential initiatives to achieve these goals is mandating Bitcoin mining in the US and establishing a national reserve for the cryptocurrency. Countries like Brazil, Poland, and Russia may adopt something similar. The US currently holds around 200,000 Bitcoin confiscated from criminal activities, valued at $21bn.
From risk to hedge
Strategies to increase a US national reserve range from buying Bitcoin with government funds to issuing debt bonds or even selling some of the nation’s gold, the latter two options carrying significant risks given Bitcoin’s notorious volatility. Some analysts think Bitcoin debt bonds could become a favourable tool in the event of another crypto crash like the one in 2022, allowing these debts to be written off.
From an economic perspective, the cryptocurrency market thrives in conditions of lower interest rates and inflation, which bolster borrowing and financing while attracting a larger number of risk-tolerant investors seeking higher returns.
On the regulatory front, traditional assets are subject to government regulations and stricter transparency requirements, such as anti-money laundering measures, so the relative weakness of legislative frameworks governing cryptocurrencies can enhance their appeal to investors.
Looking more broadly, cryptocurrencies may one day provide an alternative for safeguarding purchasing power and wealth in countries with unstable fiat currencies. Unlike fiat currencies, which central banks can issue in unlimited quantities during inflationary periods, Bitcoin, for instance, has a limited supply, making it a hedge against inflation.
Given the rising tariffs that US President Donald Trump wants to impose on trading partners (which are expected to reignite inflation), cryptocurrencies—particularly Bitcoin—could yet see a growth surge.