Tag Archives: credit

30-Year Mortgage Rate Tops 3% for First Time Since July

Americans who purchased new homes or refinanced their mortgages over the past few months may have done so at just the right moment.

The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose to 3.02%, mortgage-finance giant

Freddie Mac

said Thursday. It is the first time the rate on America’s most popular home loan has risen above 3% since July and the fifth consecutive week it has increased or held steady.

Mortgage rates fell throughout most of 2020 after the Covid-19 pandemic ravaged the economy. That helped power the biggest boom in mortgage lending since before the financial crisis, fueled by refinancings. When rates hit 2.98% in July, it was their first time under the 3% mark in about 50 years of record-keeping.

The recent upward moves paint a clear contrast: More vaccinations in the U.S. and recent progress on the latest coronavirus relief bill have brightened investors’ outlook on the economy, a key variable in determining borrowing rates.

Mortgage rates tend to move in the same direction as the yield on the 10-year Treasury, which has been rising. Treasury yields rise when investors feel confident enough in the economy to forgo safe-haven assets such as bonds for riskier ones including stocks. Last week, the yield hit its highest level in a year.

Freddie Mac chief economist

Sam Khater

said he expects a strong sales season, partly because he thinks “the uptrend in rates from here will be more muted than the past few weeks.” The Federal Reserve has said it would maintain ultralow interest rates until the economy improves.

“The Fed has seen the carnage from the last crisis, and they don’t want to pre-empt the recovery by starting to raise rates and choking off that nascent recovery,” Mr. Khater said.

However, rising rates have started to weigh on home purchase and refinance applications in recent weeks.

The U.S. mortgage market involves some key players that play important roles in the process. Here’s what investors should understand and what risks they take when investing in the industry. WSJ’s Telis Demos explains. Photo: Getty Images/Martin Barraud

Higher mortgage rates could discourage some would-be buyers from trying to purchase a home during the key spring selling season, because higher interest rates translate into larger monthly payments. That could prompt people to search for a cheaper house or to put their homeownership goal on hold.

Even before the recent climb in rates, surging U.S. home prices had begun to outweigh the savings afforded by historically low borrowing rates. The typical monthly mortgage payment in the fourth quarter rose to $1,040 from $1,020 a year earlier even as mortgage rates declined, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Rising rates can also put the brakes on refinancings, which accounted for about 60% of mortgage originations in 2020, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

With a 30-year rate of 2.75%, about 18 million U.S. homeowners could reduce their monthly payments through a refinance, according to mortgage-data firm

Black Knight Inc.

When the rate rises to 3.25%, the pool of eligible homeowners shrinks to about 11 million.

Homeowners such as Lindsay Ellis of Charlotte, N.C., who closed on a refinance last month, may have locked in some of the lowest mortgage rates available for the foreseeable future.

Ms. Ellis cut the rate on her condo from about 4.6% to 2.9% through a refinance with

Rocket

Cos. She hasn’t decided where she’ll put the roughly $160 in monthly savings, but she plans to explore different investment options.

“I didn’t have to do a lot of the work to shop around and compare rates because the rate they gave me was great,” she said.

Ms. Ellis wouldn’t have qualified for a refinance when rates began falling last year because unemployment benefits kept her afloat for part of 2020. Ms. Ellis, a fitness director, was furloughed from her job last St. Patrick’s Day and couldn’t return until the fall. She began to consider the refinance shortly after.

Write to Orla McCaffrey at orla.mccaffrey@wsj.com

Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Bitcoin is at a ‘tipping point’ between mainstream boom and speculative implosion. Citi says one is more likely

U.S. stocks have started the week in strong fashion, as bond yields eased from last week’s highs early on Monday.

Two positive developments over the weekend have also buoyed investors: The U.S. House passed the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion pandemic-relief package on Saturday before the Food and Drug Administration granted emergency authorization to Johnson & Johnson’s
JNJ
COVID-19 vaccine — the first single-shot dose available to Americans.

The price of bitcoin
BTCUSD
rose more than 5% to $47,691 on Monday, as it regained ground following the cryptocurrency’s worst week of the year last week, having climbed to a record high of $58,332 the previous weekend.

In our call of the day, Citi analysts said bitcoin was at a “tipping point” between mainstream acceptance or a “speculative implosion.” But recent developments, including electric-car maker Tesla’s
TSLA
$1.5 billion investment and moves by PayPal
PYPL,
Visa
V
and Mastercard
MA
to accept payments, pointed toward the former.  

The analysts, led by Citi GPS managing editor Kathleen Boyle, noted there was a “host of risks and obstacles” standing in the way of the cryptocurrency’s progress.

“But weighing these potential hurdles against the opportunities leads to the conclusion that bitcoin is at a tipping point and we could be at the start of massive transformation of cryptocurrency into the mainstream,” they said. 

The report added that bitcoin could eventually become “the currency of choice for international trade,” due to its global reach, neutrality and lack of foreign exchange exposure.

The biggest change in recent years has been the shift from a retail-focused endeavor to “something that looks attractive for institutional investors,” the authors noted.

If recent efforts lead to a central bank-backed digital currency, individuals and businesses would have digital wallets holding a variety of cryptocurrencies just like today, with checking, savings and treasury accounts, they said. “In this scenario bitcoin may be optimally positioned to become the preferred currency for global trade,” they added.

However, obstacles ahead along that path include upgrades to the marketplace and the potential for the cryptocurrency space to move closer to the oversight and rules of traditional financial regulators, Citi noted.

The markets

U.S. stocks made significant early gains, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA
2%, or 620 points, higher shortly after the open. The S&P 500
SPX
and the Nasdaq Composite
COMP
were also up. European stocks climbed and Asian markets moved higher overnight on hopes for Biden’s U.S. stimulus package and following last week’s selloff.

The buzz

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said he would have “no hesitancy whatsoever” to take Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, and that all three vaccines available to Americans were “highly efficacious.”

Reddit Chief Executive Steve Huffman reiterated his praise for the WallStreetBets forum that has sent Wall Street “meme stocks” reeling in recent weeks. Huffman said the community “exposed a gap” between those who have access to the financial markets and those on the outside.

U.K. home builders surged on Monday, on reports the government will try to boost homeownership with a new mortgage guarantee.

Cruise operator Royal Caribbean Group said it has commenced a $1.5 billion public stock offering.

Ladbrokes owner Entain
UK:ENT
said it has raised its offer for rival Swedish sports betting company Enlabs.

At the Golden Globe Awards, “The Crown,” “Schitt’s Creek” and “Nomadland” were among the big winners.

Random reads

Actor Ben Stiller’s baked trophy and other Golden Globes highlights.

Doctor appears in court video call while performing surgery.

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Credit card payments system outage hits US businesses

  • Customers at McDonald’s, Ikea, Popeyes, and others say they can’t pay using their credit cards.
  • The payments processor Fiserv said its services were interrupted on Friday.
  • Earlier in the day, Chick-fil-A experienced an outage and gave out free meals.
  • Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.

Businesses across the US are accepting only cash as their credit-card payments systems are down.

Fiserv, one of the leading payments providers in the US, told Insider, “A widespread internet service provider outage has impacted multiple businesses today.” Ann Cave, a company spokesperson, added in an email: “Some Fiserv services that rely on internet connectivity were interrupted. The majority have been restored and we are fully focused on restoring the remainder.” Fiserv declined to name its internet service provider. 

Customers on Twitter reported outages at Ikea, Forever 21, McDonald’s, and Popeyes, as well as at local places like a car wash and the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission. Representatives from the businesses weren’t immediately available for comment on Friday.

Chick-fil-A’s payment machines weren’t working earlier in the day, leading it to give out free meals. Miami International Airport put out a statement telling customers about a countywide outage with credit-card machines inside taxis.

Customers called out Fiserv on Twitter. “Our credit card payment processing system is currently out of service,” the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy tweeted. “The outage occurred with First Data/Fiserv, which is one of the largest payment processing systems in the country.”

In 2019, Fiserv acquired another payments firm known as First Data in a $22 billion deal. The acquisition reflected a trend of consolidation in the payments-processing industry amid the world’s shift from cash to credit cards.

Other major payments providers, Worldpay and Global Payments, did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment on the outage.

Down Detector, which tracks outages, reported an increase in problems for people with Visa or Mastercard credit cards.

Seth Eisen, a Mastercard spokesperson, told Insider, “As far as Mastercard is concerned, we’re operating normally today.”

“Visa is aware of a service disruption with a third-party provider, used by some merchants, that is causing internet issues which may have impacted a small number of cardholders today,” a Visa spokesperson told Insider. “Visa systems were not impacted.”



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Stocks Fall, Led Lower by Tech Shares

The Dow Jones Industrial Average inched down 0.1% after closing Wednesday at an all-time high. The S&P 500 fell 0.3%, and the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.6%.

Stocks have wobbled the past week as investors have grappled with a sharp rise in bond yields. The shift, which money managers have broadly attributed to bets on inflation and growth picking up, has tempered enthusiasm for some of the pricier sectors of the stock market.

The S&P 500 technology sector lost 0.5% Thursday, among the worst-performing sectors in the index. Meanwhile, sectors of the market thought to benefit most from rising economic growth, like financials and energy, were higher for the day.

The KBW Nasdaq Bank Index, which tracks the performance of 24 lenders, added 0.6%.

“The market is jittery. The bond yields’ rising is putting equities, especially growth stocks, under pressure,” said

Sebastien Galy,

a macro strategist at Nordea Asset Management. “There is a bit of a risk reduction broadly.”

One group of stocks that bucked the trend: “meme” stocks that have surged in popularity among individual investors this year.

In a wave of volatility reminiscent of last month’s rally,

GameStop

jumped 50%, while

AMC Entertainment

climbed 14%. The two stocks had soared in overnight trading as well.

The moves show “there is still liquidity and a lot of access to speculative bets,” said Sophie Chardon, cross asset strategist at Lombard Odier. “We have to be prepared to live with this kind of targeted bubble, but I wouldn’t see it as a threat to the global equity market.”

Meanwhile, government bond prices fell, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note ticking up to 1.460%, from 1.388% Wednesday.

“The rise in yields is supportive for banks, higher oil prices are supportive for energy. It is a change of leadership,” Ms. Chardon said.

Overseas, the pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 edged up 0.2%.

Among individual equities, beer maker

Anheuser-Busch InBev

fell almost 6% after its fourth-quarter profit came in below estimates.

Traders worked on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday.



Photo:

Nicole Pereira/Associated Press

British packaging company

DS Smith

jumped over 6% on reports that rival Mondi is exploring a takeover.

Investors have also been selling European government bonds in recent weeks as they look for higher returns. The yield on French 10-year bonds, which moves inversely to the price, ticked up above zero for the first time since June and reached as high as 0.024%.

In Asia, most major benchmarks finished the day up.

The Shanghai Composite Index added 0.6% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index climbed 1.2%. South Korea’s Kospi Index rallied 3.5% after its central bank kept interest rates at historic lows.

Write to Anna Hirtenstein at anna.hirtenstein@wsj.com and Akane Otani at akane.otani@wsj.com

Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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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.

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M&T Bank Nears Deal to Buy People’s United for More Than $7 Billion

M&T Bank Corp. is nearing a deal to buy People’s United Financial Inc. for more than $7 billion, according to people familiar with the matter, in the latest in a string of regional-bank tie-ups.

The companies are discussing an all-stock deal that could be announced as soon as this week, the people said, assuming talks don’t fall apart. Based in Bridgeport, Conn.,based People’s United has a market value of roughly $6.6 billion, while Buffalo, N.Y.-based M&T’s is more than $19 billion.

Combined, the banks would have more than $200 billion in assets, with a network of branches concentrated in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic regions. The deal would facilitate M&T’s expansion into the Boston market and strengthen its position in New York and Connecticut.

For M&T, a serial acquirer, it would be its first major takeover since its acquisition of Hudson City Bancorp Inc. in 2015. That deal was delayed for three years after regulators found “significant weaknesses” in M&T’s anti-money-laundering and consumer-compliance programs.

M&T is among the largest regional lenders in the Northeast, with $142.6 billion in assets at the end of 2020. Commercial real-estate loans comprise almost 40% of its portfolio, including some to New York City’s battered hospitality sector. But loan performance at the bank, as well as that of many of its regional peers, has been better-than-expected over the past year.

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Credit Suisse earnings q4 2021

Credit Suisse bank.

NurPhoto | NurPhoto | Getty Images

LONDON — Credit Suisse swung to a better-than-expected loss in the fourth quarter of 2020, on the back of higher provisions for legal disputes.

The Swiss bank reported Thursday a net loss of 353 million Swiss francs ($392.8 million) for the fourth quarter of 2020. This was better than market expectations. According to Refinitiv, analysts had forecast a net loss of 558.5 million Swiss francs for the quarter and a net income of 2.8 billion Swiss francs for the year. Credit Suisse ended 2020 with a net income of 2.7 billion Swiss francs.

The Swiss bank had notified the markets in January that it would be sinking to a higher-than-expected loss in the final quarter of 2020 after setting aside $850 million for a legal dispute over property debt in the United States. Credit Suisse then agreed to a $600 million settlement last week.

Thomas Gottstein, chief executive officer of Credit Suisse, said a in a statement: “Despite a challenging environment for societies and economies in 2020, we saw a strong underlying performance across Wealth Management and Investment Banking, while addressing historic issues.”

Speaking to CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore Thursday, he said he was “very satisfied” with the results and that 2021 will be “the year where can look forward to growth.” “We had an excellent start, all five divisions are up,” Gottstein said.

Other highlights for the quarter:

  • CET 1 ratio, a measure of bank solvency, reached 12.9% from 12.7% a year ago.
  • Revenues stood at 5.2 billion Swiss francs, from 6.2 billion Swiss francs a year ago.
  • Total operating expenses were 5.2 billion Swiss francs, versus 4.8 billion at the end of 2019.

The bank’s wealth management division saw revenues down by 24% year-on-year in the fourth quarter. Global Investment Banking, on the other hand, reported a 19% year-on-year jump in revenues.

Pandemic caution

Back in January, Credit Suisse also announced it would start buying between 1 billion and 1.5 billion Swiss francs of its own shares from Jan. 12. The bank has now added that it will pay a dividend of 0.2926 Swiss francs per share in relation to its 2020 results.

Going forward, Credit Suisse sounded cautious on the back of the pandemic. “We would caution that the COVID-19 pandemic is not yet behind us and, notwithstanding the continued fiscal and monetary stimuli, the pace of recovery remains uncertain,” the lender said in a statement.

The share price is up about 12% since the start of the year.

More SPACs in 2021

SPACs (special purpose acquisitions company) have gathered a lot of interest in the United States as a way to raise capital. In broad terms, it is a shell company set up by investors who will raise money by going public and then use the funds to acquire another firm.

In 2020, there were about 200 SPACs that went public. Virgin Galactic and Nikola Motor are just two examples of companies that have gone public by merging with SPACs.

“SPAC business has been very strong overall in the market in 2020 and continues actually even stronger now in Asia and Europe,” Credit Suisse’s Gottstein told CNBC, describing the process as a “clear alternative to traditional IPOs,”

“We do see definitely a pick up in interest in Europe in SPACs and we will see more in 2021 than we saw in (20)20, but there are some structural disadvantages compared to the U.S. dollar, because of the negative rates,” Gottstein added.

In the euro zone, interest rates are still in negative territory, largely due to the Covid-19 crisis. In the United States, however, the federal funds rate, though close to zero, is still in positive ground.

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Tech Stocks Propel S&P 500 Higher

Technology stocks led the S&P 500 higher Thursday, pushing the broad index toward its first gain in three trading sessions.

Shares of chip companies, IT services providers, electronic equipment and software companies all rallied, pulling tech stocks in the S&P 500 up about 1%. Those gains, while most other sectors were either marginally higher or trading in the red, led the S&P 500 up 0.2% in midday trading following two straight days of losses.

That also helped pull the Nasdaq Composite up 0.4%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has less exposure to tech compared with the S&P 500, was mostly flat after notching a record a day earlier.

Some solid earnings supported the gains, along with ongoing expectations of additional relief measures by Congress to support the economy, analysts and investors said. The latter got a boost after fresh data showed that 793,000 Americans applied for first-time unemployment benefits in the week ended Feb. 6, while new applications for the prior week were revised higher to 812,000.

“There is still obviously a significant number of jobs that have been lost, and there is clearly a need for more fiscal support,” said Shoqat Bunglawala, head of multiasset solutions, international, at Goldman Sachs Asset Management.

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Third stimulus check IRS updates today: when will it come, amount, dates, child tax credit, $1.9 trillion breakdown

Global stocks nudge higher, sustained by bottomless stimulus

Global shares rose for a ninth day running on Thursday, just off record highs, as investors digested recent gains and sustained by the promise of more free money after a benign US inflation report and a dovish Federal Reserve outlook.

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 countries, was 0.1% higher. That was not far from peaks reached the day before and just sustaining a nine-day streak of gains, a first since October 2017.

“The story really is still US equities first and foremost,” said James Athey, investment director at Aberdeen Standard Investments. “Earnings season has been especially strong in the US, the fiscal stimulus coming from the Biden administration is getting bigger in the market’s mind and most of the big winners from the pandemic are U.S. listed.

“Only the Fed can rock the boat and with yesterday’s disappointing inflation print that prospect has just slipped even further into the future.”

The outlook for more global stimulus got a major boost overnight from a surprisingly soft reading on core US inflation, which eased to 1.4% in January.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said he wanted to see inflation reach 2% or more before even thinking of tapering the bank’s super-easy policies.

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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

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