Does Bitcoin at $100,000 Signal a Last Laugh for HODLers?

What is there to say with Bitcoin at $100,000 for those of us who thought $10,000 looked nuts. After 15 years of cryptocurrency boom-and-bust cycles, rags-to-riches (and back to rags) stories, scams and bankruptcies, a carnival mood is back and hushing us naysayers.

Politicians are joining the party: Donald Trump is appointing pro-crypto officials, eyeing a Bitcoin reserve and even hawking his own coin. So are punters, who are trying their hand and losing their shirts in the risky meme coin market. Like the 18th-century carnival of Rome attended by the poet Goethe — where all mad and foolish behavior save knifing and brawling was allowed — it’s the mystified tourists who are in the minority.

bitcoin reaches

Right now, it’s Anthony Scaramucci of all people whose analysis makes the most sense: Bitcoin’s new milestone shows it’s gained wider acceptance as a tradable asset and portfolio investment, offering both big gains and gut-wrenching drawdowns (the last peak-to-trough fall after Covid-19 was around 76%). The flipside of having no intrinsic value and a decentralized architecture with a huge energy footprint means that nobody’s using Bitcoin to buy their groceries, though: Only 7% of US consumers hold Bitcoin, according to Deutsche Bank AG research, and a survey published last month by the UK Financial Conduct Authority found only 16% of people who owned cryptocurrencies used them for payments. Skeptics focus on the lack of real-world adoption — yet it’s speculators banking on so-called digital gold who’ve come out richer.