Guggenheim's Scott Minerd backtracks on cryptocurrencies by comparing them to Tulipmania - but says the crash doesn't signal the death of crypto
- Guggenheim CIO Scott Minerd compared cryptocurrencies to the 17th century tulip bubble on Wednesday.
- A price correction doesn't signal the death of crypto, just as Tulipmania didn't end trade in tulips, he said.
- Minerd has previously made varying crypto predictions, raising eyebrows about him possibly sowing fear.
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Guggenheim Partners' Scott Minerd compared cryptocurrencies to the Dutch Tulipmania bubble after bitcoin's dramatic sell-off on Wednesday.
"Crypto has proven to be Tulipmania," Minerd said in a tweet. "As prices rise, tulip bulbs and #crypto currencies multiply until supply swamps demand at previous market clearing prices."
Tulips became known as a status symbol in 17th century Holland, now known as the Netherlands. A particular plant virus that made the flowers bloom with colors made them more desirable. But supply couldn't keep up with demand and subsequently, inflation was inevitable, as speculation drove the prices of tulip bulbs higher.
At the tulip market's peak, the bulbs were sold at six times an average person's salary and at one point carried a value of more than certain houses.
"This is not the death of #crypto just as the collapse of Tulipmania was not the end of tulip bulbs!" Minerd tweeted.
The investment chief's remark seems a tad surprising as he had reiterated a bullish bitcoin price target of as much as $600,000 as recently a month ago. He had, however, predicted it could fall by 50% to as low as $20,000 given that its bull run has been much too fast.
Compound Finance founder Robert Leshner disagreed with Minerd's observation, saying in a tweet: "Scott is dead wrong, bordering on financial malpractice. The supply of cryptocurrencies (#Bitcoin) and crypto assets ($ETH, $COMP, etc) does not increase as a function of price. That's like saying the supply of stocks increases, as demand does. Lousy look for @GuggenheimPtnrs."
Minerd has previously done a U-turn on crypto, and provided varying predictions. In January, he said on CNBC's "Closing Bell" that bitcoin would plunge to $20,000, and would go no higher than where it was at the time, which was around $40,000.
His back-and-forth between bullish to bearish raised several eyebrows when one Twitter user with a sizeable following noticed a bitcoin transaction connected to a half billion dollar bitcoin investment that matched an amount and date in a Guggenheim SEC filing.
Critics argue statements like his spread what the crypto community call "FUD" (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) and spook investors into selling their holdings, in order for institutions to buy more cheaply.
Minerd's gloom-and-doom predictions didn't prove to be true, as the digital asset went on to hit an all-time high of near $65,000 in mid-April before sliding since then.
Bitcoin was last trading 8% higher on Thursday at $40,000, after falling to as much as $30,016 the previous day. It is still up 38% so far this year.
Contributer : Business Insider https://ift.tt/2QzyAFv
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