Apple Inc
AAPL
$154.51
(+1.61%)
Alphabet Inc - Class C
GOOG
$2,291.69
(+1.33%)
Alphabet Inc - Class A
GOOGL
$2,287.90
(+1.68%)
Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN
$2,177.18
(+0.06%)
Microsoft Corporation
MSFT
$269.50
(+1.86%)
Meta Platforms Inc - Class A
FB
$197.65
(+0.73%)
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. - Class B
BRK.B
$312.53
(-0.14%)
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd - ADR
BABA
$84.57
(-0.32%)
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM
$118.89
(-2.44%)
Johnson & Johnson
JNJ
$177.09
(-0.14%)
Bank Of America Corp.
BAC
$35.76
(-1.68%)
Exxon Mobil Corp.
XOM
$85.02
(+0.66%)
Wells Fargo & Co.
WFC
$43.08
(-2%)
Visa Inc - Class A
V
$193.58
(+0.3%)
Walmart Inc
WMT
$149.18
(-1.41%)
Shell Plc - ADR
RDS.B
$51.06
(0%)
Shell Plc - ADR (Representing Ordinary Shares - Class A)
RDS.A
$51.04
(0%)
Intel Corp.
INTC
$44.01
(+2.18%)
AT&T, Inc.
T
$19.36
(-0.97%)
Unitedhealth Group Inc
UNH
$488.01
(+0.33%)
Cisco Systems, Inc.
CSCO
$49.55
(+1.21%)
PetroChina Co. Ltd. - ADR
PTR
$47.65
(+0.04%)
Novartis AG - ADR
NVS
$84.39
(+1.09%)
Pfizer Inc.
PFE
$49.49
(+1.75%)
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing - ADR
TSM
$88.82
(+1.74%)
Toyota Motor Corporation - ADR
TM
$166.45
(-1.2%)
Home Depot, Inc.
HD
$291.16
(-1.98%)
Oracle Corp.
ORCL
$72.53
(+1.38%)
Boeing Co.
BA
$132.95
(-0.27%)
Procter & Gamble Co.
PG
$154.79
(-0.53%)
Verizon Communications Inc
VZ
$48.13
(-1.01%)
Citigroup Inc
C
$48.75
(-2.29%)
HSBC Holdings plc - ADR
HSBC
$30.75
(+1.05%)
China Mobile Limited - ADR
CHL
$27.51
(0%)
Coca-Cola Co
KO
$64.01
(-0.93%)
Anheuser-Busch In Bev SA/NV - ADR
BUD
$54.66
(+1.09%)
Mastercard Incorporated - Class A
MA
$325.33
(-0.81%)
Abbvie Inc
ABBV
$152.09
(+0.75%)
Comcast Corp - Class A
CMCSA
$40.30
(+1.36%)
Philip Morris International Inc
PM
$98.88
(-0.99%)
Walt Disney Co (The)
DIS
$107.68
(+0.65%)
PepsiCo Inc
PEP
$171.49
(-0.12%)
Unilever NV
UN
$60.50
(0%)
Unilever plc - ADR
UL
$45.49
(+1.47%)
Merck & Co Inc
MRK
$87.81
(+0.19%)
NVIDIA Corp
NVDA
$175.95
(+3.81%)
International Business Machines Corp.
IBM
$129.13
(-3.95%)
3M Co.
MMM
$149.12
(-2.14%)
No Result
View All Result
The New York Ledger
  • Home
  • News

    Everytable, a California Chain With Sliding Scale Prices, Opens in New York

    Military briefing: why Russia and Ukraine are fighting over Snake Island

    A Pasta Granny Gets a Perch in Manhattan

    Financial support for Ukraine falling short, says Janet Yellen

    Buffalo Shooting Live Updates: Biden Arrives in City to Mourn Shooting Victims

    LaChanze, a Tony Nominee, Is Casting Herself in New Roles

    Trending Tags

    • general news
    • Risk News
    • Political/General News
    • industrial news
    • Travel
    • Financial Crime
    • business
    • consumer services
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle
Subscribe
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News

    Everytable, a California Chain With Sliding Scale Prices, Opens in New York

    Military briefing: why Russia and Ukraine are fighting over Snake Island

    A Pasta Granny Gets a Perch in Manhattan

    Financial support for Ukraine falling short, says Janet Yellen

    Buffalo Shooting Live Updates: Biden Arrives in City to Mourn Shooting Victims

    LaChanze, a Tony Nominee, Is Casting Herself in New Roles

    Trending Tags

    • general news
    • Risk News
    • Political/General News
    • industrial news
    • Travel
    • Financial Crime
    • business
    • consumer services
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle
Subscribe
  • Login
The New York Ledger
No Result
View All Result
Home Markets

The crypto shake-out shows boring is back

May 14, 2022
in Markets
A A
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When Coinbase first listed on public stock markets last year, it was quite the moment for the crypto exchange itself and for the digital assets industry more broadly — the moment crypto was allowed behind the velvet rope and into the Wall Street establishment.

No matter that the company’s own regulatory filings said it was reliant on a small number of customers, nor that it said employees “generally do not maintain the same compliance customs and rules as financial services firms”. It was effectively a case of “shut up and take my money”. The listing delivered Coinbase a market capitalisation of $65bn, at the time on a par with the value of Intercontinental Exchange, the owner of the New York Stock Exchange itself.

The stock has been a dud from the start. Investors who got in on day one were already down 25 per cent by the time this year began. But after a truly grim week marked by drab first-quarter earnings and a disclosure flub that forced chief executive Brian Armstrong to apologise and deny the company was about to go bankrupt, shares are now down 80 per cent from their opening price on debut.

The “shut up and take my money” approach is dead, killed by the US Federal Reserve’s decision to withdraw the punch bowl and push up interest rates. The new, more discerning mantra is “cool story, bro. Prove it.” This is a theme running throughout financial markets. Stories without substance don’t sell any more.

This is illustrated perhaps most starkly in the crypto asset market that Coinbase depends on. Bitcoin, ethereum and a small clutch of other coins grab most of the attention in this space, along with joke coins that tend to be named after Elon Musk’s pets. (No, really.)

For years, the biggest of those tokens have drawn in buyers, generally retail investors but also the odd libertarian billionaire and some hedge funds and stashes of private wealth.

The stories backing these purchases have been varied. Some true believers say crypto is a new global currency. Give it time, they say. Well, it has had time now, more than a decade in fact, and I still can’t use it to buy a white Americano, or any other daily items for that matter. Others have claimed that bitcoin’s hard limit on the number of coins in circulation makes it an inflation hedge. Well, again, inflation is running at 40-year highs in the US, and still crypto has plunged in price. This is a purely speculative asset, and that’s fine, as long as speculation is in vogue. It no longer is.

Perhaps the biggest storytellers in crypto, though, are operators of so-called stablecoins, which are meant to be pegged one-to-one to the dollar. Generally, this is done by amassing reserves to match the value of tokens in circulation. But details on what those reserves consist of have been lacking, especially from tether, the biggest player in this space. We asked tether this week for some nitty-gritty on how it manages what it says are tens of billions of dollars’ worth of US government bond holdings. It declined to elaborate, saying that information represents its “secret sauce”. Tether’s $1 peg has already taken a severe hit in recent days. That kind of handwaving is unlikely to convince the doubters.

But the new, more cynical and probing tone in markets is not confined to the Wild West of crypto. Equities in the whizz-bang futuristic technology sector have been hit particularly hard, too. “It looks like disruptive cash-burner stocks are leading the market down,” said Charles Cara at Absolute Strategy Research.

The new mood among investors means that companies face greater urgency to shift from grand plans for disruption to old-fashioned cash generation.

“The stocks that don’t manage this have zero value, while those that do will have lower growth (albeit more profits) which argues for lower valuations,” he said. “Either way, it does not point to a long-term rebound in these high valuation stocks.”

The game has, quite simply, changed, led by the jump in US government bond yields — the flip side of a drop in price as inflation stays sticky and central banks crank up benchmark interest rates.

“With higher rates, there’s less willingness by investors to finance companies that are cash flow negative,” said David Older, head of equities at Carmignac. The 10-year US government bond yield, which has swept up from 1.5 per cent at the end of last year to 2.9 per cent now, is the key metric he watches here, he says.

“How much of the expansion of multiples was sustainable and valid, and how much was down to low interest rates and to people staying at home trading stocks? There’s a lot of pain in the market,” he added.

Favoured up-and-coming stocks of the lockdown era, particularly from companies that failed to spot they were riding a short-term wave, are no longer working. Instead, Older is looking for opportunities in sectors such as cyber security and software — companies that can point to real and steady cash flows.

It may be less exciting than getting in early on a disruptive stock or picking the next Amazon. But there are reasons why oil major Saudi Aramco eclipsed Apple as the most valuable company in the world this week. While high energy prices drive its share price, boring also sells.

katie.martin@ft.com

Source: Financial Times

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Markets

Indian insurer LIC slips in historic stock market debut

Markets

Russia to permanently ‘decouple’ with west on energy, gas producers say

Markets

Global stocks push higher as traders assess economic outlook

Markets

Electric vehicles overtake phones as top source of cobalt demand

Markets

China: worse

Markets

Crypto’s collapse highlights UK policy tensions

Markets

Pension trustees voice concern on push into illiquid assets

Markets

Investors pull $7bn from Tether as stablecoin jitters intensify

Markets

Value stocks shield investors from worst of 2022 market storm

Popular News

  • The Office Beckons. Time for Your Sharpest ‘Power Casual.’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tiger Global gets mauled by the bear market

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Woman Threw Tantrum Before Fatally Pushing Voice Coach, Prosecutors Say

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Bumble: dating app is no Match for Tinder

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Affirm struggles to convince investors of fintech bona fides

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Latest News

Companies

Deutsche Bank looks to escape a decade of scandal and strife

Tech

Students call for tougher monitoring of social media videos

Lifestyle

Balenciaga’s trashed trainers are dividing opinion — and tapping into fashion history

Politics

The F.D.A. authorizes Pfizer-BioNTech boosters for children ages 5 to 11.

About Us

The New York Ledger is an online newspaper for cosmopolitans, global entrepreneurs, management staff, influencers, and other modern leaders who care about wider aspects and broader opinions.

Category

  • Business
  • Climate
  • Companies
  • Lifestyle
  • Markets
  • News
  • Politics
  • Spotlight
  • Tech

Topics

Ivan Bednjicki LuxVerte Praimgest S.A Roberto Hroval Themis Ecosystem
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

© 2021 All Rights Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle

© 2021 All Rights Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.