Does Crypto Belong in a Portfolio?

allan rothCrypto currencies are now too valuable to ignore. As of June 26, 2024, Bitcoin has a market capitalization of $1.21 trillion and Ethereum’s market cap is $406 billion. Even Dogecoin, started as a joke, has an $18 billion value. You can see the market capitalization of various crypto currencies here. While there are thousands of crypto currencies, Bitcoin and Ethereum comprise nearly 73 percent of the 100 most valuable crypto currencies.

The SEC approved spot Bitcoin ETFs which were launched in January and a recent ruling suggests that spot Ethereum ETFs will soon be coming. Previous Bitcoin ETFs were futures based.

With crypto going mainstream, it’s important that advisors understand the pros and cons of including crypto in a portfolio. That was the subject of a debate between Matt Hougan, chief Investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management, and me at the AICPA Engage24 conference in Las Vegas in early June. Bitwise has one of the largest Bitcoin ETFs, the Bitwise Bitcoin ETF (BITB), and Hougan obviously pro-crypto, while I was a “soft no,” which I’ll explain in a bit. Bob Huebscher, the founder and former CEO of Advisor Perspectives moderated the session.

Here are some pros and cons you can discuss with your clients.

The case for crypto

Hougan led with a comparison of traditional finance versus the decentralized use of blockchains, which of course is the core technology used in crypto. In traditional finance, stocks take two days to settle, bank wires two to four days, and bill pay one to five days. He contrasted this with blockchains which work 24/7/365, settle within minutes, and have nominal fees.