What’s an ETF? And why is it driving Bitcoin back to record high prices?

Beware of another bubble!

How does an ETF work?

An exchange-traded fund is an investment fund, comprising a pool of assets, traded on a stock exchange. The general attraction is that an ETF offers individual investors the benefits of diversification, protection, and liquidity.

Suppose, for example, you want to invest $100,000 in commercial property. You can’t afford to buy an office building or a shopping center by yourself – and, even if you could, buying just one building would be putting all your eggs in one basket.

Here’s where a funds manager with an ETF can help. The manager buys a number of office buildings and shopping centers across a range of locations. Suppose these assets cost $100 million. These are “bundled” into a fund with 1,000 units sold for $100,000 each.

It’s like buying a share in a company. It allows you, the investor, to avoid the exposure that comes from buying a single asset. Instead, you get a share of a diversified portfolio.

If the value of the portfolio rises, so does the value of your unit. If you want your money – to liquidate your asset by selling it – this is easy to do because the fund’s units are traded on an exchange.

An ETF is also regulated. This protects you from some of the risks (such as fraud) that come from buying assets directly.

How funds are managed

Rather than physical assets (as in our example), many ETFs hold securities such as stocks and bonds or derivatives. These funds can be either passively or actively managed.

Passively managed funds, which are the most prevalent, hold a basket of assets that track the market, or a market segment. An “index fund”, for example, holds shares in proportion to their weight in a stock market index such as theStandard & Poor’s 500 Index. If a company makes up 5% of the index’s value, the manager will ensure its share makes up 5% of the fund.

Actively managed funds, by contrast, hold more shares whose price the fund manager expects to rise strongly, and fewer or no shares they expect to perform poorly. Whether the return on these funds exceeds those delivered by passive funds depends on whether the fund managers’ judgment (or luck) is better than that of the market as a whole.

What has this got to do with Bitcoin?

A Bitcoin-based ETF is seen as something that will entice more investors to gamble on cryptocurrency.

Buying Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies directly can be fraught. Forget your private key (the equivalent of a password or PIN) and you loseit all. There is no friendly local bank manager who can retrieve or reset a password or make good your loss.

Scams are also on the rise. In the US alone, more than81,000 cases of fraudwere reported in 2020.

So bundling up cryptocurrencies into products overseen by traditional funds managers and regulators can be seen to have advantages, bringing greater respectability to cryptocurrency trading. (So long as you aren’t bothered by that being the antithesis of the decentralized and distributed ideals that drove techno-libertarians to create cryptocurrencies in the first place.)

Beware another bubble

But while investing in cryptocurrencies through an ETF brings a number of safeguards, it does not reduce the market risk. An indirect gamble is still a gamble.

Indeed anETF of Bitcoin futuresisn’t even indirect ownership of a pool of bitcoins. It’s a pool of contracts about bets on the future price of the cryptocurrency.

If this sounds a bit like the complicated derivatives known as collateralized debt obligations that led to the Global Financial Crisis in 2008, you’d be right. The more complex the financial instruments become, the more dangerous they may be.

One of the few who predicted the collapse of that market was hedge fund manager Michael Burry (portrayed by Christian Bale in the 2015 movieThe Big Short). Last weekhe effectively warnedthat cryptocurrencies are a speculative bubble. This is a view shared by mosteconomistsandbusiness leaders.

As with all bubbles, some will make fortunes, but many will lose. Take care.

This article byJohn Hawkins, Senior Lecturer, Canberra School of Politics, Economics and Society and NATSEM,University of Canberra,is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.

Story byThe Conversation

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