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Bank of America Says Cryptocurrencies Continue to Act as Risk Assets

Ether continues to slide as investors shift to a wait-and-see approach regarding future upgrades, the bank said in a research report.

Updated Apr 9, 2024, 11:41 p.m. Published Sep 26, 2022, 8:17 a.m.
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Digital assets continue to act as risk assets, falling as global interest rates rise, Bank of America (BAC) said in a research report Friday.

Still, positive signs of an eventual recovery include stablecoin inflows. Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to another asset, such as the U.S. dollar or gold.

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Last week these inflows jumped to $490 million, 58% higher than the previous week, the report said, as “real-world use cases like payments/remittances are adopted and real-world data providers like decentralized oracle networks increase functionality.”

The four largest stablecoins had exchange net inflows for the third week in a row, the report said, noting that large Binance USD (BUSD) inflows/USD coin (USDC) outflows could be the result of investors “preemptively rotating” into BUSD from USDC to avoid disruptions following Binance’s decision to auto convert some stablecoins into its own stablecoin.

Bank of America expects regulatory clarity to support decentralized finance adoption. DeFi is an umbrella term used for lending, trading and other financial activities carried out on a blockchain without the use of traditional intermediaries.

The jump in ether’s (ETH) price from mid-July to mid-August continues to reverse as investors digest that the Ethereum blockchain’s switch to proof-of-stake (PoS) does not fix scalability concerns or high fees, and these investors shift to a “wait-and-see approach regarding future upgrades,” the note said.

The transition from proof-of-work (PoW) to a more environmentally friendly proof-of-stake consensus mechanism is the first of five upgrades for the Ethereum blockchain, a process that was called the Merge.

Read more: Morgan Stanley Says Stablecoin Market Cap is Contracting Again

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The South Korean financial firm backs the U.S.-based blockchain company to accelerate enterprise wallet technology and real-world asset tokenization.

What to know:

  • Kresus has secured roughly $13 million (KRW 18 billion) from Hanwha Investment & Securities.
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  • The deal signals continued institutional investment in blockchain infrastructure despite uneven crypto markets.