- Pensioners have yet to invest in Bitcoin ETFs.
- Set-and-forget strategy will take years to play out.
- Ex-Merrill Lynch trader draws comparison with gold ETF launch.
For all the inflow records theyâve broken, the new spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds, launched in January, have yet to show investors what theyâre really capable of.
Thatâs because millions of people with individual retirement accounts still havenât had the opportunity to get exposure to the products, Darius Tabai, co-founder of decentralised perpetuals exchange Vertex, told DL News.
But once they do, the floodgates will open in what he said will be a âconstant uptake of physical coins.â
According to Nasra, a national trade association of national and local retirement funds in the US, public pension assets in the United States were nearly $6 trillion at the end of last year.
âAnd once you get millions of people doing that, thatâs when you see the real effect of it. That naturally takes time.â
â Â Darius Tabai, co-founder of Vertex
A former global head of metals trading at Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse, Tabai said that ETFs tend to simply swallow assets up.
âUnless theyâre very badly run, they only go in one direction,â he said.
So why have the Bitcoin ETFs stalled?
âPress the buttonâ
After two months of aggressive inflows, most of the funds have seen days without any flows whatsoever â and even net outflows in some cases.
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But thatâs just the nature of Wall Street, according to Tabai.
âPeople donât deploy their capital in one hit.â
âPut yourself in the shoes of a financial adviser. Youâre never going to say to your clients, âput 20% or 100% of your money in Bitcoin,ââ Tabai said.
However, if a portfolio already has good returns, advisers may encourage clients to allocate 1% to 5% of their funds into Bitcoin, scaling in over time.
âWhen someone sets that up and presses the button, that order will just buy forever,â Tabai said. âAnd once you get millions of people doing that, thatâs when you see the real effect of it. That naturally takes time.â
Gold blueprint
Drawing from almost two decades of trading precious metals, Tabai said that investors greatly underestimated the impact the gold ETF would have when it was launched in 2004.
âEveryone wanted to tell you that the ETF was not a big deal,â Tabai said. Pensions could already get exposure to the industry through mining companies â a thesis shared by investors and Bitcoin miners â and the gold ETF wouldnât get traction.
But the precious metal rose about 370% in almost seven years.
Nowadays, the biggest gold ETF has over $61 billion in assets, and the commodityâs price is almost 500% higher than it was when the ETFs were launched.
Bitcoin is in a similar situation, Tabai argued.
âIn crypto, Bitcoin miners provide a very direct comparison, but thereâs also exchanges and other kinds of businesses with their own unique characteristics,â Tabai said. âGalaxy Digital is a great company, but itâs not a pure exposure to Bitcoin. Same with MicroStrategy.â
Galaxy Digital is a venture capital firm that invests in crypto projects. MicroStrategy is a software company that holds a large amount of Bitcoin in its treasury.
Still not 2021 yet
Even if pensions take a while to allocate to the ETFs, the bullish undercurrent is bound to benefit Bitcoin.
Tabai said there is âa lot of momentumâ for crypto to keep rising over the next 12 months.
And heâs not particularly concerned about the Federal Reserveâs monetary policy either.
Barring a market crash, âyou either see other markets stagnate and crypto grinding on asset reallocation, or rates get cut and that just adds fuel to the fire,â Tabai said.
There are other signs that Bitcoin still has a ways to go.
Tabai said that most of the mania seemed âinternal to the market,â meaning that outside investors have yet to jump on the bandwagon.
âThe parties are definitely a lot better at conferences than they were last year,â a metric which Tabai half-jokingly uses as âa broad interpretation of how bullish people are.â
Tom Carreras is a markets correspondent at DL News. Got a tip about Bitcoin ETFs? Reach out at tcarreras@dlnews.com