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Gold Investors Are Moving to Bitcoin and Ethereum, According to Bloomberg Commodity Strategist Mike McGlone

Gold is experiencing outflows as investors embrace cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), according to Bloomberg commodity strategist Mike McGlone. McGlone says in a new Stansberry Research interview that investors are “giving up on gold” and instead taking positions in the two largest cryptocurrencies by market cap. “The thing that I have underestimated […]

The post Gold Investors Are Moving to Bitcoin and Ethereum, According to Bloomberg Commodity Strategist Mike McGlone appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Evergrande Losses Sparks Fear of Looming Credit Contagion, Janet Yellen Asks to Raise US Debt Ceiling

Evergrande Losses Sparks Fear of Looming Credit Contagion, Janet Yellen Asks to Raise US Debt CeilingGlobal investors have their eyes peeled on the Evergrande Group or the Evergrande Real Estate Group, China’s second-largest property developer by sales. Evergrande Group shares nosedived on Monday dropping to 11-year lows and many analysts and economists are concerned about a possible credit contagion. Credit problems with China’s real estate industry have affected global markets […]

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

Walmart and Litecoin Payment News Debunked by Walmart Spokesperson, LTC Prices Shudder from Fake News

Walmart and Litecoin Payment News Debunked by Walmart Spokesperson, LTC Prices Shudder from Fake NewsOn Monday, September 13, a press release was published by globenewswire.com and said it was connected to “Walmart Inc,” the American multinational retail corporation. Several mainstream media outlets published stories about it including Reuters, Bloomberg, and CNBC. Not too long after these reports were published, the press release saying Walmart and Litecoin partnered was verified […]

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

Which stablecoins were actually ‘stable’ during this week’s sudden Bitcoin price crash?

Crypto traders flocked to the safety of stablecoins during the Sept. 7 market crash.

A sharp sell-off across the cryptocurrency market Tuesday—that saw top tokens like Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), Cardano (ADA), and Solana (SOL) fall by double-digital percentages—created a venue for stablecoins to prove their worth.

The fixed-price cryptocurrencies offered interim protection to traders from the notorious crypto price volatility. They did so by almost maintaining their one dollar-peg and offering sufficient liquidity to traders that looked for a safety net during the market decline.

Blockchain analytics service CryptoQuant reported dramatic spikes in the stablecoin transfers as the cryptocurrency market cap fell from $2.38 trillion to $2.103 trillion on Tuesday.

For instance, Tether, the leading stablecoin by volume, processed $10.51 billion worth of transactions on Tuesday compared to $4.02 billion on Monday.

The mean of all stablecoins transfer. Source: CryptoQuant

Similarly, the second-largest stablecoin USDC, backed by Circle, reported $5.728 billion worth of transfers on Tuesday versus $3.27 billion in the previous session, logging a 74% spike.

At the same time, the net stablecoin supply in circulation remained relatively idle, around $67 billion, showcasing adequate liquidity against demand even in the face of a brutal crypto market decline. As a result, many top stablecoins maintained their 1:1 dollar peg despite logging minor price drifts.

Centralized stablecoin more dependable

Among the top-10 stablecoins that showed minimal average deviation from their one dollar peg included six centralized, two mixed, and two algorithmic projects.

USDC demand pushed its average valuation by about $0.00196 above a dollar, closely followed by Paxos (PAX), which traded $0.00203 above the same peg.

Top 10 stablecoins ranked according to their average deviation from the US dollar. Source: Larry Engineer's stablecoin tracker

Similarly, Binance exchange's native stablecoin BUSD and MakerDAO's DAI maintain their stability via a dynamic system of Collateralized Debt Positions (CDPs), autonomous feedback mechanisms, and a variety of user incentive structures, was up $0.00244 from its dollar peg. 

Tether's wider demand across the cryptocurrency spectrum also pushed its average deviation up by $0.00244.

Related: Tether promises an audit in ‘months’ as Paxos claims USDT is not a real stablecoin

Meanwhile, TrustToken's TUSD, Stable Universal's HUSD, and Terra's UST drifted $0.00249-0.00385 from their dollar valuation. FRAX and FEI posted decoupled from their dollar peg by jumping $0.00404 and $0.00474 above it, respectively.

The data snapshot was taken 24 hours after the Sept. 7 crypto market crash.

Stablecoin collapse good for Bitcoin? 

But potential stablecoin risks have also attracted the attention of top U.S. officials, including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Boston's Federal Reserve's President Eric Rosengren.

In July, Yellen “underscored the need to act quickly to ensure there is an appropriate U.S. regulatory framework in place,” in a meeting with the heads of the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Related: Stablecoin growth could affect credit markets, rating agency warns

Meanwhile, Rosengren called Tether a potential challenge to financial stability.

In July, a paper released by Fitch Ratings also noted that collateralized stablecoins could trigger short-term credit market contagion. Excerpts:

"A sudden mass redemption of [tether] could affect the stability of short-term credit markets [...] particularly if associated with wider redemptions of other stablecoins that hold reserves in similar assets."

But what does a stablecoin market collapse could mean for Bitcoin and similar digital assets? Mike McGlone, the senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, said it would benefit Bitcoin, in particular.

"If the whole market collapse, there is only one safe store of value left: Bitcoin."

For more about the potential risk of stablecoins, check out Cointelegraph's latest video report.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

Gold, bond portfolios are ‘naked’ without Bitcoin, Bloomberg strategist asserts

The declaration appears as Bitcoin pops back above $50,000, with its addition in a Gold-Bond portfolio outperforming the S&P 500 index.

What is protecting an investment portfolio from potential stock market volatility? As per Bloomberg Intelligence's Mike McGlone, a merged exposure of Bitcoin (BTC), gold, and government bonds.

The senior commodity strategist, who sees BTC heading to $100,000, pitted derivatives in a new report representing the three safe-haven assets against the performance of the S&P 500 index, finding that the trio has been outperforming the benchmark Wall Street index at least since the start of 2020.

Bitcoin-Gold-Bonds performance against the S&P 500 index. Source: Bloomberg Intelligence

The Bitcoin-Gold-Bonds index took data from the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) and iShares 20+ T- Bond ETF (TLT). The three funds enable investors to gain exposure in the market without requiring to hold/own the physical asset.

Bitcoin more profitable than gold and bonds

McGlone noted that Bitcoin did some heavy lifting in making investors' risk-off strategy successful, adding that their portfolios "appear increasingly naked" without the flagship cryptocurrency even if they remain exposed to gold and bonds.

The statement took cues from the performance of Bitcoin, gold, and the 10-year US Treasury yield against the prospect of rising quantitative easing and debt-to-GDP levels. Since March 2020, Bitcoin has risen almost 1,190%, which comes to be extensively better than spot gold's 25.93% spike.

BTC/USD weekly price chart. Source: TradingView.com

Meanwhile, the U.S. 10-year bond yield has jumped from its record low of 0.33% to 1.326% in the same period.

However, despite a healthy spike, the returns on the benchmark government bond have come to be lower than the core U.S. inflation of 5.4%, suggesting that investors who hold bonds as safety against risky equities are making an inflation-adjusted loss.

US consumer price inflation rose to 5.4% in July. Source: Forex Live

As a result, lower yields have created avenues for corporates to borrow at meager rates for expansion, thus giving equities a boost. Additionally, investors in the secondary markets have started moving their capital into non-yielding assets like Bitcoin and gold, anticipating higher payouts.

Yield rebound ahead?

Former bond investor Bill Gross, who built Pimco into a $2 trillion asset management firm, noted that bond yields have "nowhere to go but up."

The retired fund manager said that the 10-year U.S. Treasury note yields would rise to 2% over the next 12 months. Therefore, bond prices will fall due to their inverse correlation with yields, resulting in a loss of about 3% for investors who bought debts all across 2020 and 2021.

Federal Reserve purchased 60% of net US government debt issuance over the past year with its $120 billion a month asset purchase program to boost the US economy. However, in August, the U.S. central bank announced that it would slow down its bond-buying by the end of this year, given the prospects of its 2% inflation rate target and economic growth.

“How willing, therefore, will private markets be to absorb this future 60 per cent in mid-2022 and beyond," questioned Gross, adding that the US bond market would turn into an "investment garbage."

"Intermediate to long-term bond funds are in that trash receptacle for sure.”

Rising rates could threaten to draw capital out of overvalued U.S. stocks. At the same time, as a risk-off trade, funds could also start flowing into the Bitcoin market. Julian Emanuel, the chief equity and derivatives strategist at brokerage firm BTIG, shed light on the same in his interview with CNBC in February. Excerpts:

"This is the environment where that catch-up trade is going to show its ability [...] You’re coming from such a low absolute level of rates that higher rates actually is likely to be supportive for alternatives like Bitcoin."

Related: 3 reasons why a Bitcoin ETF approval will be a game changer for BTC price

To McGlone, the capital inflow into Bitcoin and the rest of the cryptocurrency market, including Ethereum, would be about finding the next-best investment opportunity. He said that digital assets may represent the "higher-beta potential," adding:

"We see Ethereum on course toward $5,000 and $100,000 for Bitcoin."

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

Bloomberg senior strategist calls Bitcoin a global reserve asset on the path to $100K

Following a massive correction, digital assets led by Bitcoin and Ethereum are on track for new highs, according to a new report from Bloomberg.

Bloomberg’s senior commodity strategist Mike McGlone has doubled down on call for six-figure Bitcoin (BTC), arguing that the first-born cryptocurrency is well on its way to becoming a global reserve asset that complements the United States dollar. 

The September edition of Bloomberg’s Crypto Outlook called $100,000 BTC and $5,000 Ether (ETH) the “path of least resistance” after the two assets survived a more than 50% correction through the summer.

“Crypto-assets appear in a revived and refreshed bull market with the 2H benefit of a steep discount from previous highs at the start,” wrote McGlone, referring to the second half of 2021. He said portfolios lacking BTC or ETH exposure are “naked,” as evidenced by the relative underperformance of gold and government bonds:

“Portfolios of some combination of gold and bonds appear increasingly naked without some Bitcoin and Ethereum joining the mix. A macro risk-off decline is a primary threat for the crypto bull market.”

While predictions for six-figure Bitcoin are nothing new, McGlone’s long-term forecast puts BTC near the center of the global financial system. “[W]e believe Bitcoin represents the digital future,” McGlone said after explaining that the dollar has advanced more than 300% against major peers since President Richard Nixon nixed the greenback’s gold peg in 1971. He further explained:

“We foresee a future of Bitcoin, the digital reserve asset, complementing the dollar reserve currency.”

Related: Dreading September? Bitcoin price hopes to break the slump trend

Bitcoin’s most passionate supporters have long argued that the cryptocurrency would mature to become a global reserve asset. Their conviction stems from Bitcoin’s superior monetary policy in an era where central banks have inflated the money supply, contributing to wealth inequality and higher prices for goods, services and assets.

Bitcoin’s value proposition has also been recognized within institutional circles, with JPMorgan Chase and BlackRock arguing that BTC is eroding gold’s market share as a storehold of wealth.

Related: Ethereum price spikes to a 3-month high above $4,000

Bitcoin price broke towards $51,000 on Friday as the broader cryptocurrency market rallied to over three-month highs. The total market capitalization of all cryptocurrencies reached $2.4 trillion during Friday’s high compared with a low of around $1.2 trillion in mid-July.

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

SEC could approve Bitcoin futures ETF in October, analysts predict

“A launch could come as soon as October, and we believe the SEC should permit several at once to avoid handing out a first-mover advantage,” Bloomberg ETF analysts said.

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is likely to approve a Bitcoin (BTC) futures exchange-traded product (ETF) by the end of October, according to Bloomberg ETF experts.

Bloomberg ETF analysts, Eric Balchunas and James Seyffart, issued an investor note on Tuesday suggesting that last week’s abrupt withdrawals of Ether (ETH) futures ETF proposals by VanEck and ProShares could trigger SEC approval of a Bitcoin ETF. 

“VanEck and ProShares’ rapid withdrawal of proposals for Ethereum futures ETFs is a good sign for a potential Bitcoin futures ETF, given the SEC has allowed those filing to remain active. A launch could come as soon as October, and we believe the SEC should permit several at once to avoid handing out a first-mover advantage,” the analysts said.

Balchunas noted that ProShares’ Bitcoin futures ETF is among the proposals to be most likely approved by the U.S. securities regulator. “We think Ether withdrawal shows SEC has nose in this right now and is in reg contact with issuers which should mean any kinks ironed out so that they can launch 75 days after filing,” he added.

Related: Europe prepares for first Bitcoin futures launch amid US ETF stalemate

The latest Bitcoin futures ETF forecast comes shortly after asset managers VanEck and ProShares suddenly withdrew their applications for Ether ETFs just two days after filing paperwork with the SEC. However, a number of Bitcoin futures ETFs applications have still remained active, with asset managers like Valkyrie, ProShares, Invesco and VanEck submitting Bitcoin futures ETF filings earlier this year.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, SEC Chairman Gary Gensler recently suggested that the regulator might be open to approving Bitcoin futures ETFs under the Investment Company Act of 1940. 

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

Bloomberg strategist explains why 30-year US bonds have ‘bullish implications’ for Bitcoin

Long-dated US Treasury yields are slumping ahead of the Jackson Hole meeting.

Despite Bitcoin (BTC) slipping back below $50,000, more and more investors are likely to move their capital into Bitcoin and gold markets in the second half of 2021 (H2), asserted to Mike McGlone on Aug. 23, the senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence.

The financial analyst cited the consistently lower yields offered by the 30-year US Treasury note behind his upside analogy. He noted that if its rate of return persists below 2%, it could enhance the price discovery stage for Bitcoin while posing a competitive advantage for traditional safe-haven assets like gold.

"Unlike the stock market, the old analog store-of-value and new digital version share substantial corrections," McGlone added, referring to the little reversion in the S&P 500 index in the first half of 2021 (H1) that increases its potential to correct lower in the H2.

In turn, it arranges new capital for other markets with extreme upside potential, such as Bitcoin.

Bitcoin, gold, and US bonds index versus S&P 500 total return index. Source: Bloomberg Intelligence

"The S&P 500 up or down 10% in 2H offers a simple binomial model," wrote the Bloomberg analyst in a research note in July.

"If up, it would be about 3x the annual norm since 1928 and buoy the Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index above the 1H gain of about 80%. If down, bond yields would likely follow and Bitcoin may be a primary beneficiary."

Bitcoin to reach new record high

The Federal Reserve's unprecedented interference in the bond market after the March 2020's market crash drove rates down. Institutional investors that ideally look for 5% annual yields from the bond market to curb inflationary pressures now grappled with short-term bonds, some of them offering yields below zero.

Meanwhile, yields on the longer-dated Treasury also fell to record lows. That forced investors to look for alternatives in the riskiest parts of the financial markets—higher-returning, non-debt investments like Bitcoin.

"It was the breach of [the 2%] threshold in 2020 that preceded the risk-off swoon and laid the foundation for Bitcoin’s move toward new highs this year," the Bloomberg research noted.

30-year US Treasury yield versus Bitcoin price. Source: TradingView.com

Tapering and Jackson Hole

McGlone's statements on bonds and Bitcoin correlation come as Jerome Powell, the chairman of Federal Reserve, prepares to deliver a speech at the Jackson Hole summit this week, typically one of the most influential economic events.

The Fed's efforts to reduce its $120 billion per month bond-buying policy expects to be a dominant theme during the (virtual) Jackson Hole meeting. Investors will watch Powell's words for any clues on how and when the U.S. central bank would begin its tapering program.

In their July 27-28 meeting, Fed officials agreed to start unwinding their bond-buying policy over a sanguine outlook for economic growth and the jobs market.

Nonetheless, the 30-year Treasury yield remained lower after the news, with reports surfacing that investors were still expecting economic downturns owing to the spread of the Covid-19 Delta variant.

"Many clients have not particularly understood how rates markets have moved, and that has brought in a degree of caution you wouldn’t normally see," Guneet Dhingra, head of US interest rate strategy at Morgan Stanley, told the Financial Times.

Related: Bitcoin bullish cross on weekly chart paints $225K BTC price target if history repeats

After the Fed outlook on Aug. 18, Bitcoin price rose by more than 14% to reach their three-month high of $50,784.

Bitcoin daily price chart. Source: TradingView.com

The BTC/USD exchange rate slipped below $50,000 on Monday on profit-taking sentiment. At its lowest, the pair's bid was $49,369.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain

Galaxy Digital partners with Bloomberg for DeFi index

According to Bloomberg, the nine DeFi assets selected for the index at launch were based on "institutional trading and custody readiness" in the United States.

Financial news site Bloomberg and Galaxy Digital Management have expanded their crypto offering to track the performance of the decentralized finance space.

In a Thursday announcement, Bloomberg said it would launch an index currently tracking nine different decentralized finance, or DeFi, projects with Galaxy Digital. As of Aug. 1, these projects included Uniswap (UNI), Aave (AAVE), Maker (MKR), Compound (COMP), Yearn.Finance (YFI), Synthetic (SNX), SushiSwap (SUSHI), 0x (ZXR), and Uma (UMA).

"Decentralized finance is growing as the next major investment theme within crypto," said Alan Campbell, Bloomberg's multi-asset index business’ head of product management. "As liquidity and institutional custody solutions continue to grow, DeFi has become an increasingly compelling option for institutional investors.”

According to Bloomberg, the DeFi assets were selected “based on institutional trading and custody readiness” in the United States, in addition to the “quality of pricing.” The news outlet said no single project would ever represent less than 1% of the index’s overall value, but no more than 40%. The funds arm of Galaxy Digital, Galaxy Fund Management, will also offer its own passively managed fund tracking the performance of Bloomberg’s, listed under the ticker DEFI.

Related: Coop to include BadgerDAO in DPI DeFi index from August

The announcement comes three years after Bloomberg and Galaxy Digital first partnered to create a joint crypto benchmark index. At its launch in May 2018, the index tracked ten cryptocurrencies from the “largest, most liquid portion” of the market, which included Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH).

Bloomberg and Galaxy Digital’s new DeFi index follows the creation of a DeFi Crypto Index Fund operated by fund manager Bitwise in February. Though Bitwise reported returns of 46.4% over the last month, the fund has a net asset value of 8.6% less since its inception.

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Bitcoin set to replace gold, says Bloomberg strategist on Bretton Woods 50th anniversary

The statement appeared as a takeaway from Blockworks' Bretton Woods: The Realignment conference that gathered economists, macro analysts, and investors to discuss Bitcoin.

Bitcoin (BTC) is replacing gold even as United States’ regulators attempt to disrupt its advance, said Mike McGlone of Bloomberg Intelligence on Aug. 16.

The senior commodity market strategist credited the "digitization of money and finance" behind the Bitcoin market's superior growth against gold, noting that the same factors helped the U.S. dollar gain dominance "rapidly and organically" over the precious metal. 

Spot gold has fallen by more than 99% against Bitcoin since August 2011. Source: TradingView.com

McGlone's comments appeared as takeaways from a recent three-day conference at New Hampshire's Bretton Woods hotel, attended by economists, macro analysts, and investors, including Fidelity Investment's Jurrien Timmer, Morgan Stanley's Amy Oldenburg, among others.

Bretton Woods is popular among economists for hosting the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference in 1944, which later led to the obligation that the United States, Canada, Western European countries, Australia, and Japan would tie their currencies to gold.

As a result, the new monetary establishment earned itself the title of "Bretton Woods system."

But on Aug. 15, 1971, the 37th U.S. President Richard Nixon took the dollar off the gold standard. Many economists hailed the move, calling upon John Maynard Keynes' benchmark opinion that the gold standard was "a barbarous relic."

The latest "Bretton Woods: The Realignment" conference served as a metaphorical homage to the end of the Bretton Woods system while focusing on emerging financial assets like Bitcoin that threaten to displace the "dollar hegemony" to become the next global reserve asset.

In doing so, Bitcoin directly challenged gold's position as a traditional competitor to the greenback, which, as McGlone stated, is already happening.

Five decades of dollar dominance

Princeton University's economic historian Harold James argued in his July 2021 article that "digital technologies are driving a new monetary revolution that could end the greenback’s global primacy altogether," hinting at the role of crypto-assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum could play in reshaping the global economy.

The statements appeared despite the dollar's ability to survive the worst of global economic conditions in the past five decades and emerge as the world's reserve asset.

In detail, the so-called Nixon Shock in 1971 led to double-digital inflation in the US, prompting the dollar to fall by more than 50% against the Japanese Yen and German Deutschmark. But neither currency could replace the greenback in the race to global fiat hegemony.

Japanese Yen performance against the USD after the the end of the Bretton Woods agreement. Source: FRED

The dollar posted strong recovery rallies in the first of the 1980s. It posted similar upside moves in the second half of the 1990s—during the dot-com boom and bust. The greenback also walked unharmed through the 2008 financial crisis and Covid-19-led economic distress.

Dollar shock ahead?

But why did the dollar survive? Bloomberg opinion columnist Niall Ferguson provided three reasons in its latest report.

First, the greenback received backing from the Federal Reserve's higher interest rate policies to reset expectations.

Oil priced in BTC. Source: Ecoinometrics

Second, liberalized capital markets, led by a boom in eurodollar and petrodollar markets, boosted the dollar's international utility, prompting foreign central banks to use it to execute international trades.

And third, the U.S. government's power to impose financial sanctions on countries it deemed unruly to the White House's policies—especially in the wake of the World Trade Center attacks on Sep. 11, 2001—made the dollar a financial weapon.

But James noted that the dollar has met unprecedented economic conditions following the Covid-19 crisis. The past 18 months have seen the U.S. deficit climbing to 13.4% of the gross domestic product (GDP), the second-largest since the end of World War 2. 

US public debt in the past five decades. Source: FRED

It expects to grow higher after the $1 trillion infrastructure bill that the Senate just passed. The Congressional Budget Office reported that the stimulus would expand the budget deficit by another $256 billion within the next decade.

Meanwhile, another package worth $3.5 trillion that focuses on anti-poverty and climate expects to get enacted by the end of this year. As a result, James noted that rising deficits had reduced the dollar's upside prospects in global markets. He wrote:

"Some dangers are already visible in the Treasury market, where there have been liquidity strains (in 2020) and a weakening of foreign demand [...] New money, therefore, may be ending the long period of dollar hegemony."

Bitcoin battles gold as alternative to dollar

The Federal Reserve's loose monetary policies have resulted in supersonic price rallies in the Bitcoin market, insomuch that the strong moves upside has beaten gold, a traditional hedging asset.

Bitcoin rose from $3,858 to $64,899 against rising US deficits. Source: TradingView.com

Pomp Investments' partner Anthony Pompliano, a long-time advocate of Bitcoin, said in a note to clients that if one holds their wealth in dollars, bonds, or gold, their investments will yield "negative real rates of return."

"You essentially are left with bitcoin or equities, which leads you to consider an allocation to bitcoin given the high degree of volatility that will likely serve to outperform equities over a long enough time period."

Pompliano's statements appeared despite potential regulatory challenges for emerging digital assets, as McGlone pointed out in his Monday tweet. The crypto industry has faced a wave of attacks from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, and Gary Gensler, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Related: What the SEC can learn from the German regulator

But McGlone noted that the hard regulations would not be able to disrupt Bitcoin's advance against gold. Additionally, Liam Bussell, head of corporate communications at crypto trading service Banxa, noted that US regulators do not wish to stop Bitcoin; they want to protect US investors from fraud.

"Illegal schemes resulted in about 82,135 cryptocurrency frauds cases in 2020 alone," Bussell said, adding:.

"The US regulators that conceivably touch digital assets (CFTC, SEC and FINRA) are open to the diversification of instruments, as long as those instruments are fair and operate in a transparent manner."

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Solana Faces a Bold New Challenger Lightchain AI and the Future of Blockchain