“Fireworks” are coming to the global currency market, according to Coinbase analyst Max Bronstein. What’s more, a spike in volatility of currencies might largely benefit the price of bitcoin (BTC), Cointelegraph reports.
He said: “A lot has been said on BTC’s performance during bouts of equity volatility, but not as much on how BTC would perform during bouts of FX/currency volatility. With global currency vols off historic lows and a huge wave of new debt, fireworks are coming to the currency market.”
Even before the pandemic hit the international economy, Bronstein noted that the global monetary system was fragile. Many countries are at risk of seeing their currencies decline in value due to various reasons.
The analyst said that currencies are vulnerable due to the low dollar reserves and high dollar-denominated debts of many nations.
Why would it benefit bitcoin?
Currencies with a history of hyperinflation are at risk of observing a similar trend in the near-term. Bronstein pinpointed the Argentine peso, the Turkish lira, and the Brazilian real as examples of currencies with low dollar reserves.
The Argentine peso, for instance, recorded an inflation rate of 42.1% in May 2020, according to data from Trading Economics. Bitcoin’s price could benefit as the fear of hyperinflation, massive currency volatility and devaluation hits, says the analyst.
Bronstein explained: “In all of these cases, currency vol and weakness will primarily stem from a government’s need to devalue their currency. Bitcoin sits in stark contrast as it can’t be debased by a central party. In a regime where nearly every government has an incentive to debase their currency, few monetary systems stand to benefit as much as bitcoin does. Never before has an open-source competitor to fiat currency been so needed.”
Not a short-term effect
The historic low volatility of the global currency market does not indicate that a massive movement will occur in the immediate-term. It also does not suggest that it will cause a near-term spike in demand for bitcoin.
In the long-term, however, concerns around devaluation and hyperinflation could spur a steady demand for bitcoin. The positive effect on BTC might snowball if the perception of the top cryptocurrency as a store-of-value improves, particularly following the V-shape recovery of bitcoin since its plunge to sub-$3,600 in March, which has shown its survivability.
Meanwhile, several other countries are struggling with similar issues pertaining to hyperinflation or devaluation of national currencies. Iran and Venezuela, for instance, have seen reports of bitcoin operating as a means of payment and unconfiscatable digital money as their respective national currencies have experienced hyperinflation in recent years.
In the long-term, as the on-ramp infrastructure supporting Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies improves, there exists a strong possibility that BTC is used as a currency, possibly alongside existing currencies.