Skip to content

With inflation peaking, could the worst be over for digital assets?

The digital-assets sector has recently experienced its worst period since it came to prominence. The price of bitcoin fell from over $64,000 in November 2021 to a low of just under $17,000 in January 2023. Meanwhile, scandals such as the November 2022 collapse of FTX, previously regarded as a reliable crypto exchange, have rocked confidence in the sector. Like many other assets, crypto came under pressure in 2022 when the US Federal Reserve (the Fed) started to hike interest rates to combat inflation. But as evidence grows that global inflationary pressures are peaking, could brighter times lie ahead for digital assets?

Digital lights pattern Source: Getty Images

Crypto loses its glister

Although prices fell sharply towards the end of 2021, the crypto sector began 2022 full of confidence. Prices rallied strongly in the first quarter, shrugging off the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, while companies spent tens of millions of dollars on marketing around the world, swamping the US Super Bowl with adverts, for example. Institutions had already been warming to the sector for some time – in a March 2021 paper, Bloomberg analysts wrote, ‘The process of bitcoin replacing gold (as a hedge against inflation) in portfolios is accelerating, and we see risks tilted toward more of the same.’ Bloomberg cited the expectation of increasing crypto-asset regulation, ‘notably on stable coins tracking the US dollar’, as further evidence that the sector was entering the mainstream. 1

However, the fall – when it came – was swift and almost exactly mirrored the downward turn in equities and fixed income. Rather than proving a diversifier, digital assets appeared highly correlated with traditional instruments, behaving as a speculative risk asset and certainly not as a gold-like hedge against inflation. Reinforcing that point, just as equities and fixed income have rallied towards the end of 2022 and into 2023 on signs that inflation may be peaking, so too have digital assets.

There’s plenty of evidence that inflationary pressures – triggered by global demand/supply imbalances after Covid-19 lockdowns ended, and surging commodity prices caused by the impact of the Ukraine war – are ebbing. Headline inflation in the eurozone fell for the third consecutive month in January, to 8.5%, down from 9.2% in December. 2 Meanwhile, US inflation fell for the sixth straight month in January, registering an annual increase of 6.5%, the lowest level in a year. 3 Moreover, following guidance that it was considering reducing the pace of monetary tightening, the Fed raised the overnight borrowing rate by just half a percentage point, taking it to a range of between 4.25% and 4.5%, following four straight three-quarter point moves.

The growing correlation between digital assets and equities

Bitcoin and S&P index chart Source: IMF
Bitcoin and S&P index chart Source: IMF

The long road back

The yield on ten-year US Treasuries has been on a downward path since peaking last November – a sign that investors are speculating that interest rates will begin to fall in 2023. That suggests the upturn in the price of cryptos and other digital assets can continue. Lower interest rates make speculative assets more attractive to investors, partly because bonds won’t offer such high returns, and partly because lower rates signal an expanding money supply.

Market yield on US Treasury securities at a ten-year constant maturity, quoted on an investment basis

Market yield on US Treasury securities chart Source: FRED
Market yield on US Treasury securities chart Source: FRED

Publication date: 2023-03-16T13:37:40+0000

The information and opinions on this report are provided for general information purposes only. IG Bank S.A. do not guarantee, explicitly or implicitly, that the information and opinions are accurate, reliable, up-to-date or exhaustive. Furthermore, this report may contain IG Bank S.A. external analyst’s judgment, future expectations, views or opinions, but actual developments and results may differ materially from such expectations, in particular due to a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors. Such statement may subject to alteration without notice.

The information contained in this report should in no event be construed as a solicitation or offer, as advice or as a recommendation to implement or liquidate an investment or to carry out any other financial transaction, and it does not constitute any legal or tax advice. It should not be used as a basis for any investment decision or other decision. IG Bank S.A. accept no liability for any loss or damage of any nature whatsoever, whether direct, indirect or consecutive, arising from accessing, using, consulting its report or navigating its website, or from links to other report and/or websites. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of this information. Consequently any person acting on it does so entirely at their own risk. Any research provided does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any specific person who may receive it and as such is considered to be a marketing communication.

Contact us

Let us create a solution tailored for your needs. Get in touch with our Swiss-based team by phone or email to discuss your objectives, or request a brochure.

Please include the country code if outside Switzerland

For more info on how we might use your data, see our privacy notice and access policy and privacy webpage.