Wharton Professor: Bitcoin Is The New Gold For Millennials
Jeremy Siegel said in an interview that Bitcoin is acting as a better inflation hedge than gold.Bitcoin is providing better protection from inflation than gold, a Wharton finance professor said.Jeremy Siegel added that B...
Jeremy Siegel said in an interview that Bitcoin is acting as a better inflation hedge than gold.
- Bitcoin is providing better protection from inflation than gold, a Wharton finance professor said.
- Jeremy Siegel added that Bitcoin has replaced gold in the minds of younger investors.
- The peer-to-peer money outperformed gold by a large margin last year, rising by almost 60% while the metal lost 5% of its value.
Bitcoin is acting as a better inflation hedge than gold and has replaced the metal in the minds of younger investors, a senior Wharton professor said in a Friday interview with CNBC.
“Let’s face the fact, I think Bitcoin as an inflation hedge in the minds of many of the younger investors has replaced gold,” Jeremy Siegel said. “I think that the story of gold is a fact that the young generation is regarding Bitcoin as the substitute.”
The professor added that gold’s performance in 2021 has been “disappointing,” in fact the metal’s worst year since 2015. Gold lost 5.81% of its value during 2021, while Bitcoin gained nearly 60%. The S&P 500, in comparison, rose by about 30%.
The performance of Bitcoin, gold, and the S&P 500 during 2021. Source: TradingView.Investors were outspoken about gold and Bitcoin in 2021, with many hinting at the ways the digital monetary system is superior to the old metal. Billionaire Howard Marks, the chairman of Oaktree Capital, said in September that Bitcoin had advantages relative to gold, adding that its 21 million supply limit enables the peer-to-peer currency to continue appreciating as demand grows. In October, JP Morgan analysts said in a note that “institutional investors appear to be returning to bitcoin perhaps seeing it as a better inflation hedge than gold.” According to the bank, money was flowing out of gold and into Bitcoin, fueling the inflation hedge narrative and the substitution of gold as the go-to asset for such a purpose.
U.S. consumer prices soared in 2021 to levels not seen for decades as the CPI, the main index used to measure inflation in the country, reached 6.8% in November, the highest rate since 1982, marking the ninth consecutive month above the Fed’s 2% target inflation rate. In response, the central bank announced further tightening of its monetary policies in 2022, seeking to end its asset purchasing programs before the summer.
Original source
Read on Bitcoin MagazineRelated market context
Coinbase Brings US-Regulated Gold and Silver Futures to 24/7 Trading, with Oil Next
Coinbase Derivatives is moving its US-regulated gold and silver futures to around-the-clock trading effective Friday evening, the...
JPMorgan Says the Debasement Trade Retreat Has ‘Accelerated’ for Bitcoin as June ETF Outflows Reach $2.1 Billion
The debasement trade that fueled demand for bitcoin and gold through much of this year is unwinding, and the retreat has accelerat...
BlackRock investors seek to redeem 13% of private-credit fund shares in Q2
Investor confidence in private credit funds is waning, prompting potential liquidity challenges and calls for greater transparency...
THE THIRD RUSH: Where is the “Bitcoin” of the Ai Goldrush?
After months of deep thinking & a lot of discussions with some very smart people, I’ve decided to write an article for the first t...
Investors pull 13% from BlackRock private credit fund in Q1
Investor redemption pressures in private credit funds may trigger broader market liquidity issues, impacting risk assets like cryp...
Tom Shaughnessy: Investment focus is shifting from crypto to AI, retail investors prefer AGI stocks over Bitcoin, and upcoming AI IPOs may face financial disclosure challenges | Unchained
Shifting investment focus from crypto to AI reveals changing market dynamics and potential growth challenges. The post Tom Shaughn...