Bitcoin Will Be Digital Gold, ‘Sovereignty Should Cost a Lot’

Mike Novogratz, a former Goldman Sachs partner and founder of crypto merchant bank Galaxy Digital, has argued that Bitcoin (BTC) occupies a unique place in the cryptocurrency landscape. Novogratz made his remarks during an interview with Bloomberg TV on Feb. 13.

Reflecting on the proliferation of crypto assets, many of which have attempted to vie with Bitcoin (BTC)’s function as store of value, Novogratz argued that:

“There’s 118 elements on the periodic table, and only one gold […] Bitcoin is going to be digital gold, a place where you have sovereign money, it’s not U.S. money, it’s not Chinese money, it’s sovereign. Sovereignty costs a lot, it should.”

Novogratz, while not providing a rationale for Bitcoin’s singularity, proposed that while blockchain in principle offers a robust system for the secure exchange of value, not all cryptocurrencies need to rely on its maximal security potentia. Unlike digital gold, less valuable, transactional cryptos may do better, he implied, to trade security for improved efficiency gains.

Bitcoin, which has recently settled around the $3,400-3,600 mark, is grinding along its bottom, Novogratz argued, and easily has the potential to go higher. Citing $8,000 as a feasible medium term price point, Novogratz nonetheless considered that “we’re not going to bubble back up.”

Reflecting on the protracted crypto winter, Novogratz quipped that the past year has demonstrated “just how painful popped bubbles can be.” Now that the retail frenzy has subsided — and with it, the inflated valuations of thousands of digital assets — the entrepreneur proposed that the industry as a whole is poised to undergo a structural shift, from “a people’s revolution to [an] institution[-led] one.

Novogratz noted that critical infrastructure for institutional investors to become comfortable with crypto is gradually falling into place — albeit temporarily slowed by the recent United States government shutdown. Forthcoming custodial solutions from New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) operator ICE’s Bakkt platform and investment giant Fidelity’s digital asset business indicate the institutional watershed “is just getting started,” he said.

As reported, while traditional financial institutions like Fidelity are beginning to step into the crypto sphere, veteran industry firms such as crypto exchange and wallet service Coinbase have also introduced their own custody solutions for institutional clients.

Novogratz’s perspective is shared by established analysts such as Netherlands-based Big Four auditor KPMG, which last fall argued that institutionalization is “a necessary next step for crypto to create trust and scale.”



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