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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBitcoin slips 1% after Fed cuts interest rates for the first time in four years: CNBC Crypto WorldCNBC Crypto World features the latest news and daily trading updates from the digital currency markets and provides viewers with a look at what's ahead with high-profile interviews, explainers, and unique stories from the ever-changing crypto industry. On today's show, Tyrone Ross of 401 Financial discusses adoption of crypto ETFs and what Wall Street still needs to learn about the asset class.
Persons: explainers, Tyrone Ross of Organizations: CNBC Crypto, CNBC
Despite the increasingly partisan sentiment in the cryptocurrency industry, bitcoin will thrive over the long term regardless of who wins the U.S. presidential election in November. It helps that bitcoin became more institutionalized than ever this year with the introduction of U.S. bitcoin exchange traded funds. "If Trump wins in November, will there be an immediate pump? If Harris wins, could there be some immediate sell pressure? Although there are concerns thanks to the Biden administration's position on bitcoin, "I would remind investors ... that bitcoin did great," under the current adminustration, Lubka added.
Persons: That's, Donald Trump's, Steven Lubka, Bitcoin, Lubka, Kamala Harris, James Davies, bitcoin, " Davies, hasn't, Harris, Biden, Tyrone Ross, Trump, Bernstein, Swan Bitcoin, Elizabeth Warren, Gary Gensler, Organizations: U.S, Swan, Exchange, Investors, Conference, Republican, Trump, Securities Locations: United States, Japan, Nashville, bitcoin
"If you make an investment into bitcoin, you understand that this is par for the course, it just is," he told CNBC. "Because bitcoin takes on a lot of asset profiles – risk asset, store of value, VC-like nascent asset class – investing in it is actually really attractive," said Greg King, CEO of investment company Osprey Funds. A very early technology play Looking at the price path on short timeframes, bitcoin will and often does mimic high-risk assets. Ross had a nuanced view, arguing that bitcoin remains a highly volatile asset. New crypto investors often overlook the Bitcoin technology, focusing instead on bitcoin the crypto asset.
Investors are constantly reminded that despite the myriad coins, projects and innovations in crypto, bitcoin may be the only "safe" crypto asset to buy. And while Tesla didn't credit the volatility for its reversal, many observers saw it as evidence that the belief in bitcoin's payments capabilities were misguided. "Bitcoin's price on any given day — as a remittance vehicle — has no effect on us," he said. The group that runs the Lightning Network, a payment protocol built on the Bitcoin network, is committed to making Bitcoin network payments even faster, less costly and more readily confirmed than transactions made directly on the Bitcoin blockchain. Crypto investors, on the other hand, were "disproportionately high-income, almost always had a traditional banking relationship, and typically had other retirement savings."
While the dramatic story of the firm's failure isn't over yet, it's a post-FTX era in crypto world, and the biggest takeaways for investors are already clear, according to financial advisors. "Investors need to differentiate between blockchain technology and exchanges," said Daren Blonski, managing principal at Sonoma Wealth Advisors. Here's what advisors say about it: Whatever you do, don't leave your crypto on exchanges There's a cutesy mantra in crypto: "Not your keys, not your coins." But as crypto becomes more popular and centralized companies provide easy onramps, advisors agree: it's time investors learn to control their funds. "It's on advisors to understand what happened before rendering some sort of judgment about it," said Adam Blumberg, cofounder at Interaxis, a crypto education and training company for financial advisors.
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