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As a store of value, we believe they are particularly problematic as they are highly volatile and merely complement other hard assets such as real estate, land and metals (and even equities) to hedge against devaluation. These hard assets should maintain their economic viability over the long term, regardless of how much a currency devalues or a new currency is introduced, as they are still productive assets. Bitcoin has a limited supply, but so does land (and to some extent gold). In addition, land doesn't need GPU infrastructure and a lot of energy to sustain itself.
Bitcoin is not widely used in everyday life, can only handle 5–7 transactions per second and has significant fees compared to a normal SEPA transfer here in Europe, which is usually free, or even to a Visa/Mastercard transaction. Also, a currency usually has a flexible supply, as we experienced in 1929 and 2008 in the event of a severe economic downturn. Furthermore, Bitcoin is not meant to scale, as early adopters and developers refuse to increase the block size, which would make Bitcoin viable as a means of transaction, but would end the speculative frenzy. Bitcoin Lightning has been launched, but adoption remains low.
Even as a “safe haven” during a panic like 2020, Bitcoin plunged from around $10,500 at its peak in February to around $4000 in March during the depths of the ongoing financial panic. This drop of more than 60% far outpaced the decline in stocks and gold, disproving its “safe haven” status at the time. On the contrary, we see Bitcoin as a pure “speculative asset”, or practically the opposite of a "safe haven asset". So, we ask the question: what problem does Bitcoin actually solve, other than speculation?
The Bottom Line
Similar to hedge funds and other capital allocators arbitraging MicroStrategy's convertible bonds, there is a second type of arbitrage involving MicroStrategy's premium to Bitcoin NAV. There is a way investors stand to gain by arbitraging this premium to Bitcoin NAV by buying the underlying asset, in this case bitcoin, and going short/ buying puts on MicroStrategy, betting on markets becoming rational and efficient in the long term, collapsing this premium to NAV to 1 again.
Although this strategy does involve certain risks, we believe that with prudent risk management some alpha stands to be gained, when limiting exposure to the short side/ puts bought on MicroStrategy and gaining sufficient exposure to the underlying. As for where fair value lies for MicroStrategy, we believe it to be somewhere between its underlying Bitcoin NAV and the premium it's currently trading at, depending on how fast MicroStrategy is able to raise capital at a premium to buy Bitcoin. In general, we're skeptical of Bitcoin and wouldn't go long the asset itself, but would still, in our view, be worth the arbitrage when combining it with buying puts/ going short MicroStrategy to capture the cross-asset class arbitrage embedded in MicroStrategy's premium to NAV.
On the other hand, investors engaging in this arbitrage would need to hope on markets becoming rational over the long term, and MicroStrategy's premium to NAV not to blow significantly out of proportion. We believe the Wall Street Journal concluded our thesis pretty well, saying that:
To go long MicroStrategy’s stock is to wager that bizarrely inefficient markets will become even more so. (WSJ) |
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