For investors living on the digital edge, bitcoin is starting to look a little old-fashioned.
Hooked on high growth, some are turning away from the original cryptocurrency – designed as an alternative to regular cash – in favour of its descendants created as native tokens of blockchain platforms that host smart contracts and apps.
MarketVector’s Smart Contract Leaders Index, which tracks major tokens of this kind – including ether, dot and solana – is up 36 per cent in 2023, outpacing even bitcoin’s 33-per-cent rise. Solana’s token is up 76 per cent this year.
Bundeep Rangar, CEO of crypto-focused investor Fineqia, said he expected the biggest crypto returns to come from smart contract tokens on platforms that support decentralized finance (DeFi) apps.
“Those are ones that you will find capital appreciation, similar to what a growth stock will be,” he added.
Some investors in the US$1-trillion world of digital assets appear to agree, according to CoinShares data which show investment products tracking ether and solana have seen small inflows even as bitcoin products suffered four consecutive weeks of outflows.
Around seven of the top 20 biggest crypto assets are smart contract tokens, including ether and dot, solana and cardano.
BofA analysts also pointed to smart contract tokens and the blockchain-based applications they power as similar to growth stocks in the equities world, typically technology shares.
“We expect 2023 to be the year of token price divergence,” analysts at Bank of America wrote in a Feb. 24 research note.
BITCOIN STILL BOSS
Bitcoin has long traded in tandem with tech stocks, but that cord may be fraying just as smart-contract tokens increasingly take up its crypto super-growth mantle.
The cryptocurrency’s 30-day correlation with the Nasdaq turned negative on Feb. 23 for the first time since early December, where a measure of one indicates the two assets are moving in lockstep.
Some crypto watchers say the relative strength in smart-contract tokens this year points to a solid performance by the most established DeFi protocols despite the market ructions of 2022. They caution, though, that the global macro outlook and central bank policy could hit the growth of crypto projects and their associated tokens.
James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, warned it was also too early to call a major divergence in crypto. Indeed, bitcoin’s shadow still looms large over the sector, with its share of the total crypto market capitalization up slightly to 40 per cent, from 38 per cent at the start of the year.
But on the other hand, Mr. Butterfill said such departures could be a potential sign of the cryptoverse growing up.
“We should be increasingly adopting the view that the market, as it evolves, will become more sophisticated and more mature, and we will start to see that price divergence.”
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