Hi! I’m Will, a Bitcoin enthusiast and a finance student. I have previously worked in research at a top brokerage firm in Paris and am currently a blockchain analyst for a consultancy company. This post is part of a series concerning bitcoin's growing acceptance as a financial tool and its uses.
Since a lot of people wonder about how to include Bitcoin in their portfolio, we will tackle the use of Bitcoin as a hedging instrument. Hope you enjoy the read.
Bitcoin has become more mainstream in the past few years and one trend seems to stick out about its price: it goes up whenever something goes wrong. Because of this Bitcoin has been likened to gold: a somewhat safe haven for your money, away from the turmoil of financial markets.
Hedging is defined as ‘reducing the risk of adverse price movement in an asset or a portfolio’. The best way to understand it is to see it as an insurance against a negative event. For example, if you buy insurance for your house, you are ‘hedging’ yourself against risks such as fires or beak-ins.
So can Bitcoin be as successful as gold to hedge your investments? Let’s take a closer look.
Usually when hedging, you most of all want to be protected from huge swings in prices, so let us take one of the most recent examples. You guessed it, Brexit!
As we expected from such an event, stocks tumbled the next day, while gold experienced a phenomenal move to the upside.
By now, you must be wondering what happened with Bitcoin?
Well, if it really worked as a hedging instrument, its price should have gone up, just like gold and… It actually did! But it ended up being nothing special compared to its usual behaviour.
Daily Chart – Bitcoin Wisdom, using Coinbase prices
Intraday Chart – Bitcoin Wisdom, using Coinbase prices
It then seems Bitcoin does not perform well as a hedging instrument. A few reasons come to mind:
- Bitcoin’s volatility
- The existing variety of existing hedging products among which futures and options
- Gold is the go-to standard to hedge against potential downside
That’s all for now folks! I hope you enjoyed this short introduction to bitcoin’s worth as a hedging product. We will go into more details and follow a more statistical approach in a future post.
Have any question? Let me know in the comments! :)