We have regulatory authorities across all major regions, North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific, all taking concrete steps to bring regulatory clarity to facilitate responsible growth in this market. By way of example, we have the EU’s MiCA Crypto Assets regulation, which was approved this summer. If I look at the US, President Joe Biden ordered a wide range of federal agencies to produce at least 17 reports on topics related to CBDCs, the so-called central bank sponsored digital currency, topics related to consumer protection, illicit activities and international operations. And in Hong Kong, regulatory guidance is expected. So, as you can see, there is a flurry of regulatory activity.
Another element to consider, and you touched upon it slightly in your response before, it has become very apparent that cryptocurrencies get a bad reputation from environmentalists and, we must say, with good reason.
The Cambridge Bitcoin electricity consumption index said that Bitcoin consumes more electricity in a year than several entire countries, including Sweden, Norway, and the United Arab Emirates. And that’s quite shocking, right? Especially in light of the recent war in the Ukraine, and the effect that it is having on energy, and energy prices, when here in Europe we’re even thinking of putting caps on the utilization of electricity during the upcoming winter.
So against that background, what potential do cryptocurrencies have as an institutional asset class? And what uses, if any, might they have in an institutional portfolio in light of regulation coming for ESG, but also at the same time with what we talked about before, in terms of their performance during the times of crisis
Riccardo: About four years ago, when Bitcoin was trading below US$10.000 the market was dominated by retail traders, but in the following years there was a great involvement of financial institutions. Cryptocurrencies have a different trend from other financial assets, and for this reason they capture the interest of financial institutions who want both to reduce the correlation with the other assets in their portfolio and to diversify the assets.
And in the last year institutional players have started to accumulate larger volumes of Bitcoin and Ethereum, not only as a way of combatting inflation but as a way to generate a constant, tangible and fixed income stream. I’ve seen surveys showing that large investors believe that, by 2026, seven percent of their assets will be in cryptocurrencies and that 38 percent of traditional hedge funds are currently investing in digital assets. This is strong growth, when you consider only one year ago, hedge fund activity in the crypto world was only 21 percent of the total.
Finally, my opinion is that cryptocurrencies will become a real asset class. We are in a phase of consolidation. There are regulatory problems, reputational risks and problems related to the use of resources for mining. But these problems will be progressively solved and crypto assets will be more and more present in the portfolios of institutional investors.