Wealth managers still in crypto ‘education mode’

Demand for emerging asset class has grown among larger investors


Reuters March 24, 2021
Bitcoin transaction volumes on darknet markets rose throughout 2018 to an average of $2 million daily. PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON:

Most wealth managers and financial advisers are still in “education mode” on cryptocurrencies but demand for the emerging asset class among larger investors has grown, the boss of Fidelity Investments’ institutional arm said on Tuesday.

While some advisers and investment firms managing the fortunes of wealthy people have grown “sophisticated” and “comfortable” with cryptocurrencies, most are still getting to grips with the technology, Mike Durbin said.

“They know what they are doing, and more importantly their end investor base also knows what they are doing - but the vast majority is still in the education mode,” he added in an interview at the Reuters Digital Assets Week.

Durbin’s comments give a snapshot of interest in cryptocurrencies at Boston-based Fidelity, whose $9.8 trillion in customer assets as of December 31 make it one of the world’s biggest investment managers, amid heightened interest in digital assets.

Booming bitcoin

Bitcoin powered to an all-time high of nearly $62,000 this month, the latest in a meteoric rise fuelled by bigger US investors.

The world’s biggest cryptocurrency has soared eightfold in the last year, sparking wider interest in digital assets from investors seeking yield in a world of ultra-low interest rates.

Mainstream companies and financial firms from Tesla Inc to Bank of New York Mellon Corp have embraced the emerging asset, sparking predictions that bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies will become a regular part of investment portfolios.

In 2018, Fidelity became one of the first mainstream investment firms to embrace cryptocurrencies, setting up a unit that offers cryptocurrency custody and other services for financial firms and corporations.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 24th, 2021.

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