Bernstein: No, Crypto Markets Aren't Like the Dot-Com Bubble

Bernstein: No, Crypto Markets Aren't Like the Dot-Com Bubble

Analysts for Bernstein contended in a report published Friday that the cryptocurrency ecosystem is developing an alternative to Wall Street.

The report argues that the blockchain industry is setting up "parallel financial networks" that exist as alternatives to incumbent systems in operation today. And while these new platforms still operate "on the fringes of the mainstream economy," Bernstein's authors say that 'with size and scale, we will witness mainstream talent and then eventually capital diverted towards" these new networks.

Indeed, the report argues that what is being developed is a "market-based innovation experiment" – yet one that isn't without its issues, as seen by the prevalence of token sale scams, among other forms of crypto-specific fraud.

At the same time, Bernstein's analysts suggest that the market for crypto-assets – being a global one that never closes for business – serves as a "natural correction system," comparing that state of affairs favorably to the 2000s dot-com bubble that played out on regulated exchanges with specific operating times.

The analysts wrote:

"To see the fund-raising landscape as scam prone and with regulatory skepticism fails to recognize it as a market based innovation experiment to build out a new financial system. And the 24*7 trading market acts as a natural correction system for the bad actors unlike the dot com bubble where the feedback for weak business models came with a lag. Crypto markets build and destroy fortunes every day."

The report also delved more deeply into specific cryptocurrencies, noting that bitcoin in particular "needs no more critiques."

It continued, saying "to start with bitcoin is the first global, digital, non-state/non-central entity controlled, financial asset with 24 * 7 market-based prices. It also facilitates global money transfer & final settlement within less than an hour (at a cost between 0.5-1%) which no bank or international network offers."

Bernstein also cited ethereum's ERC-20 token and its use in token sales as "the killer application" for the network.

"While, fraught with regulatory uncertainties around retail sale of security and fraudulent projects, the fund-raising movement has funded many projects that are building the core infrastructure layer of the crypto fintech network," the authors wrote.

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