Japan, South Korea drive
global bitcoin prices as retail investor pile in
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[May 26, 2017]
HONG
KONG (Reuters) - Japanese and South Korean buying helped drive the price
of bitcoin to an all-time high this week, with the digital currency more
than doubling its value since the start of the year, analysts and market
practitioners said on Friday.
Frenzied buying as the price peaked at $2,760.10 on Thursday caused
website outages on Coinbase, the global bitcoin company that allows
consumers to buy and sell bitcoins. The price has since fallen back to
$2,632.74.
In Japan and South Korea, among the largest markets for bitcoin
globally, bitcoin traded at a premium of more than $300 higher above the
global average, according to CryptoCompare.com.
The rally appeared to have been driven by new buying from smaller retail
investors, suggesting bitcoins are increasingly viewed among the general
investing public as an alternative asset class much like gold, analysts
said.
"There were some people that made a big profit in a short time and it
got more media attention. Then even people that hadn't known about
virtual currencies began coming in, thinking it can be a way to make big
money in a short time," said Kim Jin-hyeong, an official at Coinone, a
South Korean cryptocurrency services provider.
Bobby Lee, CEO of BTCC in Shanghai, one of the world's largest bitcoin
exchanges, said the global macroeconomic environment, which has seen
sustained low interest rates, was conducive to investments in
alternative assets like gold, silver and bitcoin.
Investor sentiment has been boosted by recent regulatory developments in
the region, with governments in both Japan and Korea introducing
frameworks paving the way for bitcoin to be used on a par with national
currencies.
Last month, the Japanese government recognized bitcoin as legal tender,
in a key development that has spawned a number of new bitcoin exchanges
in the country, making it more attractive to traditional retail
investors.
"In the past, bitcoin was traded only by the people who have been
dealing with crypto-currencies. This year, regular people are starting
to join, making trading so volatile," said one Japan analyst.
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A Bitcoin (virtual currency) paper wallet with QR codes and a coin
are seen in an illustration picture taken at La Maison du Bitcoin in
Paris, France, May 27, 2015. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
Price
spikes are also being driven by the scarcity that is built into the global
bitcoin market.
Bitcoins are created through a computing process known as "mining" but the total
number of bitcoins that can ever be created is capped at 21 million globally
meaning an inflow of new investors is able to dramatically inflate prices.
The average person can easily purchase and trade bitcoins through an online
trading platform such as Coinbase using their normal debit or credit card,
meaning real money can flood into the currency very quickly.
"Retail investors who might otherwise have traded stocks or an exchange traded
fund are now trading bitcoins," said Leonhard Weese, president of the Bitcoin
Association Hong Kong and a bitcoin investor.
"Suddenly everyone is realising that there will only ever be 21 million bitcoins
and that this might be there last chance to get into the market - and that is
what is leading to these huge price spikes."
(Reporting by Michelle Price in Hong Kong, John Ruwitch in Shanghai, Joyce Lee
in Seoul and Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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