The chief investment officer of global fixed income at Blackrock, the world’s largest asset manager, says bitcoin and crypto are durable assets. “I think there’s a healthy recalibration going on,” he said, noting that “if you look two to three years hence, they will be higher than today.”
Rick Rieder, chief investment officer (CIO) of global fixed income at Blackrock, shared his view on bitcoin and cryptocurrency in an interview with Yahoo Finance Live on Thursday. Blackrock is the world’s largest asset manager with about $10 trillion in assets under management (AUM).
The CIO explained: “I think people underestimate. When you leave rates at such low levels for such an extensive period of time … when you keep policy too easy, the leverage builds in the system slash ‘how do I capture return quickly’ — and you are seeing a lot of the leverage that was built up around crypto come unglued pretty darn quickly.”
However, he emphasized:
I still think bitcoin and crypto are durable assets. It’s a durable business, but there was so much excess built around it.
Rieder described: “It’s not terribly dissimilar from the internet bubble … if you go back to the ’99 and 2000, was the internet a bad idea? No, it wasn’t a bad idea. But you created so much excess around it and you just have to de-gear that dynamic, and I think we are seeing that today.” He noted: “Markets go down five times faster than they go up … That’s why you were seeing this incredible unwind.”
While reiterating that he still thinks bitcoin and crypto are durable assets that are “going to go on,” the Blackrock executive opined:
I think there’s a healthy recalibration going on. It’s a question of how much that recalibration is going to go.
When asked about the prices of major cryptocurrencies, he admitted that for crypto: “It’s pretty hard when there is no true intrinsic value. So, what is it worth? It’s worth what the next person will pay.”
He continued: “My sense is, in all these situations, you overshoot, and my guess is you have probably got some downside to go from here. But it’s hard to say what fair value is.” The Blackrock chief investment officer further shared:
My sense is like a lot of assets, if you look two to three years hence, they will be higher than today.
“But it could overshoot on the downside. This is hard to figure out, just like gold, because I can’t figure out my free cash flow multiple and what my security is underneath it,” he concluded.
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