Tag Archives: article_normal

Mining stocks have surged in a struggling U.K. market — and have 2 more tailwinds

It’s been a pretty impressive 12 months for the world’s leading miners.

The FTSE 350 mining index
156995,
-0.22%
— which includes diversified mining giants Rio Tinto
RIO,
-0.13%,
BHP Group
BHP,
+0.35%,
Anglo American
AAL,
-0.23%,
and Glencore
GLEN,
-0.33%
— has returned 46% to shareholders over the last year, according to FactSet, compared with the 7% drop for the broader FTSE 350.

The sector is benefiting from a surge in the value of the metals they unearth. Front-month copper
HG00,
+0.10%
futures have jumped 62% over the last 12 months, silver
SI00,
+0.15%
has gained 51%, and platinum
PL00,
+0.91%
has added 32%.

And there are two big trends that should further boost the sector.

The first is the decline of the dollar
DXY,
-0.14%.
A weak dollar environment increases the purchasing power of the key commodity-consuming markets, notably China, points out Ephrem Ravi, an analyst at Citigroup. A lower dollar also helps loosen global monetary conditions, as so much of the world’s corporate debt is denominated in the greenback.

As the chart shows, there is usually a strong correlation between mining sector stocks and the change in the dollar.

Another boost is coming from the rise in copper vs. gold. The copper-to-gold ratio has been edging up over the past year, which implies optimism over global growth, says Citi’s Ravi. Copper is needed for manufacturing and construction, whereas gold is often used as a safe haven in ties of financial duress.

Jeffrey Gundlach, the DoubleLine Capital chief executive and so-called bond king, has said the ratio of copper to gold closely tracks U.S. government bond yields, which tend to rise as the economy improves.

According to Ned Davis Research, citing data stretching back to 1995, the European metals and mining industry has outperformed the market by an average annual gain of 9.7% when the economic outlook is improving, but underperformed by 7.4% annually when the economic outlook is deteriorating.

Mark Phillips, European equity analyst at Ned Davis Research, says it makes sense for miners to go through booms and busts. “A boom will start when an increase in demand for commodities drives up prices while short-term supply remains relatively fixed. As elevated prices persist this incentivizes companies to invest in new projects that had previously been uneconomical,” says Phillips.

“However, long lead times typically mean that many companies invest in new projects at the same time, resulting in cost pressures and a supply glut, which may come at a time when demand begins to wane. This results in a fall in prices, and metals and mining companies high up the cost curve go out of business,” he adds.

Supercycle talk

Also behind the gains are talk by some of a commodities supercycle. That basically means a cycle lasting decades, and moving commodities as a whole. “The commitment by many nations to be carbon neutral and less energy intensive by 2050-2060 requires significant infrastructure investment which will be commodity intensive. Structural models of commodity prices have shown that at each major stage of economic development: agricultural, industrial, and service, commodity usage can change, increasing the likelihood of a supercycle in early stages of development,” says Daniel Jerrett, chief investment officer at Stategy Capital, which started a global macro fund last month.

The talk in the market is of inflation, fueled by lax monetary policy and aggressive fiscal spending. Analysts at Variant Perception, a research firm, have made the case that heightening inflation risks, the need to hedge for them, and “generationally cheap” prices will lead to a commodity supercycle. Among the major banks, JPMorgan also has endorsed the commodity supercycle view.

It is lonely betting against miners at the moment. There aren’t any short positions against the big miners that are large enough to be reported, according to the daily updates from the Financial Conduct Authority.

But there are a few with dissenting views. Ben Davis, an analyst at Liberum Capital, has a sell rating on Rio Tinto, and a hold on BHP. Dollar weakness, he acknowledges, can help the rally continue, “but feels like a lot of that in the price.” And Davis doesn’t believe commodities are in a supercycle.

But Davis anticipates a slowdown in Chinese credit, which will soon make an impact. Loan growth gradually has decelerated from 13.2% year-over-year in June to 12.7% in January.

“Chinese credit tapering will start being felt in commodities demand and whilst the restock in the rest of the world is a very powerful force, it’s unlikely to last beyond the middle of the year. The earliest and biggest beneficiary this cycle has been iron ore, and for that reason BHP and Rio Tinto have the most near-term downside in our opinion,” he says.

Read original article here

A tangled market web of Tesla-bitcoin-ARK Investment could spell trouble for investors, warns strategist

Tuesday is shaping up to be a tough one for technology stocks, after a selloff greeted investors to start the week.

The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-2.03%
— up 40% over the past 12 months — tumbled 2.5% on Monday over concerns rising bond yields could make those tech stocks look pricey. When so-called “risk-free” yields are climbing, it is that much tougher to justify equity valuations that seem lofty.

Leading techs lower in premarket is electric-car maker Tesla
TSLA,
-5.41%,
down 6% after a roughly 8% drop on Monday. Our call of the day comes from Saxo Bank’s head of equity strategy, Peter Garnry, who has been warning clients that Tesla is tangled up in a “risk cluster” that involves bitcoin and Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment Management firm.

Tesla announced a $1.5 billion bitcoin investment earlier this month. Along with Tesla weakness, bitcoin was down 10% early Tuesday, which some attributed to criticism from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (see below). That crypto drop will “obviously illustrate the earnings volatility that Elon Musk has delivered to Tesla,” said Garnry.

Read: Tesla bitcoin gambit already made $1 billion, more than 2020 profit from car sales, estimates analyst

Meanwhile, Tesla “is also the biggest position across all ARK Invest ETFs which added pressure to its biggest fund the ARK Disruptive Innovation Fund
ARKK,
-6.11%
losing 6% yesterday. This is exactly the risk cluster that we have been worrying about and wrote about two weeks ago,” said the strategist.

Read: Stocks aren’t in a bubble, but here’s what is, according to fund manager Cathie Wood

In the Saxo note that deep-dived into the hugely popular, actively managed fund’s holdings, Garnry highlighted ARK’s concentration in biotech names that he said could be risky if the market decides to reverse. And Tesla shares represents 6.7% of total assets under management across ARK’s five actively managed ETFs, according to the data Saxo crunched two weeks ago.

“What it means is, that a correction in equities for whatever reasons, could be higher interest rates or prolonged COVID-19 lockdowns, could set in motion selloffs across either biotechnology stocks or Tesla shares and cause performance to deteriorate which could start net outflow of AUM and then the feedback loop has started,” said Garnry, at the time.

For her part, Wood, the chief executive of ARK Invest and manager of the popular ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund, last week said she was surprised by how fast companies are adopting bitcoin, and that her “confidence in Tesla has grown.”

The markets

Stocks
DJIA,
-0.43%

SPX,
-0.78%

COMP,
-2.03%
are selling off, led by techs, with European stocks
SXXP,
-0.49%
sinking apart from some travel stocks. Asian markets had a mixed day
000300,
-0.32%.
Oil prices
CL00,
-0.19%
are rising, while the closely watched yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.360%
is trading at around 1.35%.

The chart

Treasury Secretary Yellen may have let some steam out of bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-13.19%
after repeating some concerns about the cryptocurrency in an interview with the New York Times’ Dealbook. Bitcoin was last down 13% to $48,886, taking a bunch of other cryptos down with it.

The buzz

All eyes on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who is kicking off two-day testimony on Capitol Hill. With more than 10 million Americans still jobless, “Mr. Powell will go out of his way, I am sure, to put tapering to bed and rightly so, as I dread to think what a taper-tantrum of the 2020s will look like,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst, Asia Pacific, Oanda.

We’ll also get the latest home-price indexes from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, along with an update on consumer confidence.

Shares of home-improvement retailer Home Depot
HD,
-4.49%
are dropping despite upbeat results.

Shares of special-purpose acquisition company Churchill Capital
CCIV,
-31.65%,
also known as a blank-check company, are sinking. After weeks of rumors, Churchill finally announced a deal to buy electric-vehicle company Lucid Motors.

Mourning 500,000-plus American lives lost to COVID-19, President Joe Biden observed a moment of silence late on Monday and urged the public to “mask up.”

Social-media group Facebook
FB,
+0.83%
says it will restore links to news articles in Australia, five days after proposed media law changes in the country.

Random read

“I can mouth obscenities at people and they don’t have a clue.” Redditors on pandemic positives.

Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

Want more for the day ahead? Sign up for The Barron’s Daily, a morning briefing for investors, including exclusive commentary from Barron’s and MarketWatch writers.

Read original article here

Investors flee bonds and snap up commodities on economic recovery hopes, while European stocks trade lower

Investors continued to flee bonds and snap up commodities on hopes the rollout of vaccines will reinvigorate the global economy, sending European stocks lower on Monday.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.363%
rose to 1.37%, after rising 14.5 basis points last week. The yield on the 10-year U.K. gilt
TMBMKGB-10Y,
0.698%
and German bund
TMBMKDE-10Y,
-0.315%
also increased. Yields move in the opposite direction to prices.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday is set to unveil England’s reopening plan, that will start with schools and by the end of March extend to golf courses and tennis courts, according to published reports. The country’s furlough plan is set to be extended through the summer.

Globally, new coronavirus cases have dropped after peaking in January.

Copper
HG00,
+0.76%
and palladium
PA00,
+0.14%
led an advance in much of the metals complex on Monday.

“One of the (many) hot stories in financial markets right now is the surge in base metal prices, where the likes of copper, tin, nickel, lead and zinc are all rallying on the back of global recovery hopes and supply challenges. This comes at a time when investors are coming around to the view that the Fed really does want to let inflation run hot and that bonds are certainly not an asset class to hold in the current environment. The key challenge for financial markets is whether the bond sell-off can prove orderly enough to allow reflationary asset classes – including equities to prosper,” said strategists at ING.

After squeaking out a 0.2% rise last week, the Stoxx Europe 600
SXXP,
-0.90%
slumped 1.1%. U.S. stock futures
YM00,
-0.58%

ES00,
-0.74%

NQ00,
-1.18%
also were lower.

Miners including BHP Group
BHP,
+0.42%
and Rio Tinto
RIO,
-0.88%
advanced, and banks including HSBC Holdings
HSBA,
+0.05%
were helped by the steepening of the yield curve, which is suggestive of higher margins.

Tech-sector plays such as microchip equipment maker ASML Holding
ASML,
-2.29%
fell. Also lower were companies that have thrived during the pandemic, such as fast-food delivery company Delivery Hero
DHER,
-4.23%,
mealkit preparer HelloFresh
HFG,
-4.48%
and supermarket delivery firm Ocado
OCDO,
-4.57%.

Read original article here

Tesla Inc. stock underperforms Friday when compared to competitors

Shares of Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
-0.77%
shed 0.77% to $781.30 Friday, on what proved to be an all-around positive trading session for the stock market, with the NASDAQ Composite Index
COMP,
+0.07%
rising 0.07% to 13,874.46 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.00%
rising 0.00% to 31,494.32. This was the stock’s second consecutive day of losses. Tesla Inc. closed $119.10 below its 52-week high ($900.40), which the company achieved on January 25th.

The stock underperformed when compared to some of its competitors Friday, as Toyota Motor Corp. ADR
TM,
+0.07%
rose 0.07% to $153.55, General Motors Co.
GM,
+0.79%
rose 0.79% to $52.57, and Honda Motor Co. Ltd. ADR
HMC,
-0.73%
fell 0.73% to $28.49. Trading volume (18.8 M) remained 20.6 million below its 50-day average volume of 39.4 M.


Editor’s Note: This story was auto-generated by Automated Insights using data from Dow Jones and FactSet. See our market data terms of use.

Read original article here

UPDATE: Sundial files shelf to issue up to $1 billion in securities over time, regains Nasdaq compliance

Canadian cannabis company Sundial Growers Inc.
SNDL,
+5.29%
has filed a shelf registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue up to $1 billion of securities over time. Calgary-based Sundial, a now penny stock of a company that once had a valuation of $1 billion, said in early February that it had fully used its previous shelf, after conducting a series of capital raises in recent months. The new shelf allows it to offer common shares, preferred shares, warrants, rights and units. Shares were down 11% premarket, but have gained 363% in the year to date, after the stock became popular with the Reddit investor group that sent shares of videogame retailer GameStop Inc.
GME,
-5.52%
and others to dizzying heights in an effort to create a short squeeze in recent weeks. Separately, Sundial said it had regained compliance with Nasdaq listing rules after its stock closed at $1 or higher for at least 10 consecutive business days. The Cannabis ETF
THCX,
+5.70%
has gained 96% in the year to date, while the S&P 500
SPX,
-0.06%
has gained 16%.

Read original article here

SocketMobile’s stock rockets to a more than 13-year high after unveiling of DuraSled scanner for iPhone 12s

Shares of Socket Mobile Inc.
SCKT,
+237.04%
skyrocketed 251.9% on very heavy volume toward a more than 13-year high in morning trading Tuesday, to pace all gainers on major U.S. exchanges, after the mobile data capture company unveiled its new DuraSled offering, which is an enterprise-grade barcode scanner for Apple Inc.’s
AAPL,
-0.78%
iPhone 12s. Trading volume spiked to more than 75 million shares, compared with the full-day average over the past 30 days of about 256,000 shares. The company said employers can now support workers who use the iPhone 12 series of mobile phones. “The DuraSled turns your iPhone into a one-handed solution that combines the versatility of the iPhone and the power of an enterprise-grade scanner,” said SocketMobile Senior Product Manager Vanessa Lindsay. The latest data showed that short interest as a percent of public float was 0.9%. The stock, which which is trading at the highest levels seen since October 2007, has soared 373.0% over the past three months, while the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.13%
has gained 8.9%.

Read original article here

This technology could transform renewable energy. BP and Chevron just invested

BP and Chevron have made a landmark expansion into geothermal energy on Tuesday, betting on a new technology that could prove to be the world’s first scalable clean energy derived from a constant source: the natural heat of the earth, 

The two major oil companies have headlined a $40 million funding round into a Canadian geothermal energy firm called Eavor. Based in Calgary, Eavor has pioneered a new form of technology that could feasibly be deployed in many places around the world.

The investment marks a key move into an area otherwise ignored by energy companies, which have largely looked to wind and solar projects in their efforts to diversify away from fossil fields.

It is the first investment into geothermal energy for BP
BP,
+1.45%
and a re-entry into the field for Chevron
CVX,
+0.58%,
which sold its geothermal assets in 2016.

Eavor has previously only accepted angel investment and venture capital. The $40 million injection will be used to further research and development to help scale the power system to be price-competitive.

Also read: Even with $1.1 trillion firepower, this fund is battling rivals to get its hands on green-energy opportunities

“We see Eavor’s potential to be complementary to our growing wind and solar portfolios,” said Felipe Arbelaez, BP’s senior vice president of zero carbon energy. “Technology such as Eavor’s has the potential to deliver geothermal power and heat and help unlock a low carbon future.”

Eavor has developed a new type of geothermal technology that, in very simple terms, creates an underground “radiator.” 

The Eavor “Loop” consists of a closed-loop network of pipes installed typically 3 kilometers to 4 kilometers below the earth’s surface, originating and terminating in the same aboveground facility. The pipes are installed using advanced drilling techniques perfected in the oil patch.

Liquid travels in the pipes from the aboveground facility through the hot ambient underground environment, before naturally circulating back to the top of the loop. The hot liquid is then converted into electricity or transferred to a district heat grid. 

A major advantage to this type of energy is that it is constant, providing a base load of electricity to a grid system without requiring challenging battery solutions of intermittent wind and solar power. 

Shots from a virtual tour of Eavor’s full-scale prototype.


Photo courtesy of Eavor.

Unlike hydroelectricity, which relies on large sources of constant water flow, it is designed to be scaled, and Eavor envisions rigs installed under solar panel fields and in space-constrained regions like Singapore.

Geothermal energy has been around for decades, enjoying a boom period in the 1970s and 1980s before largely falling out of the spotlight in the 1990s. Relying on heat below the surface of the earth, it has long been an attractive proposition for oil-and-gas companies, which have core expertise in below-ground exploration and drilling.

The problem is that conventional geothermal technology relies on finding superhot water sources underground, making them expensive, risky, and rare bets. More recent advances have roots in the shale oil boom, and use fracking techniques to actually create the underground reservoirs needed to generate energy. But this can pose a problem from an environmental and sustainability standpoint.

Eavor’s solution doesn’t require the exploratory risk of traditional geothermal energy or disrupt the earth the way that fracking-style geothermal does.

Plus: Tesla and other car makers will be impacted by Boris Johnson’s new plan for electric vehicles. Here’s how

John Redfern, Eavor’s president and chief executive, told MarketWatch that the system’s predictability, established in field trials in partnership with Royal Dutch Shell
RDSA,
+1.25%,
is repeatable and scalable, making it much like wind and solar installations.

“We’re not an exploration game like traditional oil and gas or traditional geothermal. We’re a repeatable manufacturing process, and as such we don’t need the same rate of return,” Redfern said.

“Before we even build the system, unlike an oil well or traditional geothermal, we already know what the outputs can be. Once it is up and running, it is super predictable,” Redfern said. “Therefore, you can finance these things exactly like wind and solar, with a lot of debt at very low interest rates.”

Read original article here

Despite surging stocks and home prices, U.S. inflation won’t be a problem for some time

When America’s amusement parks and baseball stadiums no longer must serve as COVID-19 mass vaccination sites, some investors believe that households pocketing pandemic financial aid from the government might start to splurge.

While a consumer splurge could initially boost the parts of the economy devastated by the pandemic, a bigger concern for investors is that a sustained spending spree also could cause prices for goods and services to rise dramatically, dent financial asset values, and ultimately raise the cost of living for everyone.

“I don’t think inflation is dead,” said Matt Stucky, equity portfolio manager at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Company. “The desire by key policy makers is to have it, and it’s the strongest it’s ever been. You will see rising inflation.”

Wall Street investors and analysts have become fixated in recent weeks on the potential for the Biden Administration’s planned $1.9 trillion fiscal stimulus package that targets relief to hard-hit households to cause inflation to spiral out of control.

Economists at Oxford Economics said on Friday they expect to see the “longest inflation stretch above 2% since before the financial crisis, but it’s unlikely to sustainably breach 3%.”

Severe inflation can hurt businesses by ratcheting up costs, pinching profits and causing stock prices to fall. The value of savings and bonds also can be chipped away by high inflation over time. 

Another worry among investors is that runaway inflation, which took hold in the late 1970s and pushed 30-year mortgage rates to near 18%, could force the Federal Reserve to taper its $120 billion per month bond purchase program or to raise its benchmark interest rate above the current 0% to 0.25% target sooner than expected and spook markets.

At the same time, it’s not far-fetched to argue that some financial assets already have been inflated by the Fed’s pedal-to-the-metal policy of low rates and an easy flow of credit, and might be due for some cooling off.

U.S. stocks, including the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.09%,
S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.47%
and Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+0.50%
closed on Friday at all-time highs, while debt-laden companies can now borrow in the corporate “junk” bond, or speculative-grade, market at record low rates of about 4%.

Read: Stock market stoked by stimulus hopes — what investors are counting on

In addition to rallying stocks and bonds, home prices in the U.S. also have gone through the roof during the pandemic, despite the U.S. still needing to recoup almost as many jobs from the COVID-19 crisis as during the worst of the global financial crisis in 2008.

This chart shows that jobs lost to the pandemic remain near to levels seen in the aftermath of that last crisis.

Job losses need to be tamed


LPL Research, Bureau of Labor Statistics

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday that he doesn’t expect a “large or sustained” outbreak of inflation, while also stressing that the central bank remains focused on recouping lost jobs during the pandemic, as the U.S. looks to makes serious headway in its vaccination program by late July. 

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Friday reiterated a call on Friday that the time for more, big fiscal stimulus is now.

“Broadly, the guide is, does it cost me more to live a year from now than a year prior,” Jeff Klingelhofer, co-head of investments at Thornburg Investment Management, said about inflation in an interview with MarketWatch.

“I think what we need to watch is wage inflation,” he said, adding that higher wages for upper income earners were mostly flat for much of the past decade. Also, many lower-wage households hardest hit by the pandemic have been left out of the past decade’s climb in financial asset prices and home values, he said.

“For the folks who haven’t taken that ride, it feels like a perpetuation of inequality that’s played out for some time,” he said, adding that the “only way to get broad inflation is with a broad overheating of the economy. We have the exact opposite. The bottom third are no where near overheating.”

Klingelhofer said it’s probably also a mistake to watch benchmark 10-year Treasury yields for signs that the economy is overheating and for inflation since, “it’s not a proxy for inflation. It’s just a proxy for how the Fed might react,” he said.

The 10-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.209%
has climbed 28.6 basis points in the year to date to 1.199% as of Friday.

But with last year’s sharp price increases, is the U.S. housing market at least at risk of overheating?

“Not at current interest rates,” said John Beacham, the founder and CEO at Toorak Capital, which finances apartment buildings and single family rental properties, including those going through rehabilitation and construction projects.

“Over the course of the year, more people will go back to work,” Beacham said, but he added that it’s important for policy makers in Washington to provide a bridge for households through the pandemic, until spending on socializing, sporting events, concerts and more can again resemble a time before the pandemic.

“Clearly, there likely will be short-term consumption increase,” he said. “But after that it normalizes.”

The U.S. stock and bond markets will be mostly closed on Monday for the Presidents Day holiday.

On Tuesday, the only tidbit of economic data comes from the New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State manufacturing index, followed Wednesday by a slew of updates on U.S. retail sales, industrial production, home builders data and minutes from the Fed’s most recent policy meeting. Thursday and Friday bring more jobs, housing and business activity data, including existing home sales for January.

Read original article here

Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. stock outperforms market on strong trading day

Shares of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd.
NCLH,
+0.25%
inched 0.25% higher to $24.14 Wednesday, on what proved to be an all-around mixed trading session for the stock market, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.20%
rising 0.20% to 31,437.80 and the S&P 500 Index
SPX,
-0.03%
falling 0.03% to 3,909.88. Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. closed $30.14 short of its 52-week high ($54.28), which the company achieved on February 12th.

The stock outperformed some of its competitors Wednesday, as Royal Caribbean Group
RCL,
-0.17%
fell 0.17% to $68.77, Carnival PLC ADR
CUK,
-1.95%
fell 1.95% to $18.11, and Carnival Corp.
CCL,
-0.57%
fell 0.57% to $20.93. Trading volume (13.7 M) remained 4.9 million below its 50-day average volume of 18.5 M.


Editor’s Note: This story was auto-generated by Automated Insights using data from Dow Jones and FactSet. See our market data terms of use.

Read original article here

Bitcoin blows past $45,000 and reaches as high as $48,000, driven by Tesla’s investment

The price of bitcoin reached as high as $48,000 on Tuesday, building on gains following news that electric-car maker Tesla has invested $1.5 billion in the cryptocurrency and may accept it as future payment for products.

After reaching a record of near $44,000 on Monday, bitcoin prices
BTCUSD,
+2.48%
hit $45,000, $46,000 and $47,000 later that evening, according to CoinDesk. Prices reached a high of $48,226 early Tuesday and have since pulled back to $46,450, according to CoinDesk.

Sparking the fresh surge for bitcoin was a Tesla
TSLA,
+1.31%
regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday. It revealed Tesla acquired $1.5 billion in bitcoins in January and plans to accept it “as a form of payment for our products in the near future, subject to applicable laws and initially on a limited basis, which we may or may not liquidate upon receipt.” 

Read: Musk’s Tesla says it invested $1.5 billion in bitcoin, sending the cryptocurrency to record levels near $44,000

That’s as Musk has been recently voicing support for cryptocurrencies on his Twitter account.

For the bitcoin faithful, it was a monumental move by a big company to invest in the digital currency and allow payments. But on the other side, some analysts questioned Tesla’s move, given the volatility of the cryptocurrency, as well as share prices of the electric car maker.

Even if bitcoin’s price multiplied by five over the past year, it could still come crashing down, Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote, told clients in a note. “The high volatility in Bitcoin’s value will therefore inevitably inject a certain volatility in Tesla’s revenue, and decrease the predictability of the company’s performance.”

Bitcoin’s year-to-date gain is up more than 60% in 2021. That’s against a 4% rise for the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.74%
and an 8.5% gain for the Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
+0.95%,
while gold
GC00,
+0.47%
is down around 3% and crude oil prices
CL.1,
+0.17%
are up 20%.

Read: Should I buy dogecoin? Why prices of the cryptocurrency are surging — but risky

Read original article here