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Bitcoin Could Hit $100,000 if Investors Treat It Like Gold, Goldman Sachs Says

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The publicly available float of Bitcoin is just under $700 billion.


Dreamstime

Bitcoin could be worth $100,000 if investors accept the premise that it really is digital gold, according to a report by


Goldman Sachs
.

At its current price around $46,800, Bitcoin has a market cap of $870 billion, compared with $2.6 trillion for gold held by the public for investment purposes, such as privately held bars and assets in exchange-traded funds.

The publicly available float of Bitcoin is just under $700 billion, as a considerable amount of Bitcoin doesn’t trade, according to Goldman. That implies that Bitcoin consists of 20% of the entire “store of value” market—Bitcoin plus gold, assuming gold at current prices around $1,800 an ounce with 44,000 metric tons in circulation for investment purposes.

Bitcoin could get to $100,000 if its market share of the “store of value” market were to increase to 50%, estimates Goldman analyst Zach Pandl. “We think that Bitcoin’s market share will most likely rise over time as a byproduct of broader adoption of digital assets,” he wrote in a note published Tuesday.

Hitting $100,000 implies Bitcoin would see annualized returns of 17% over the next five years. The target doesn’t assume demand growth for “store of value” assets, and it factors in the supply growth of Bitcoin, with about 900 coins minted every 24 hours at the current production rate (scheduled to halve in early 2024).

Yet Bitcoin won’t have a straight shot to $100,000—if it ever gets there. “The network’s consumption of real resources may remain an important obstacle to institutional adoption,” Pandl writes, flicking at the energy consumption toll that Bitcoin mining takes.

That is no trivial matter. Many countries are trying to reduce their carbon emissions, and Bitcoin mining—a global network of computers processing transactions—doesn’t help. Bitcoin miners are consuming 0.56% of the world’s electricity consumption, similar to the amount used by countries like Norway or Sweden, according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index.

Some of that energy comes from renewables, but Bitcoin is also being mined from coal, oil, and natural gas-fired plants. And it’s getting tougher to justify in countries facing crippling energy shortages and soaring prices.

In Kazakhstan, where mining has taken off after China banned the practice, protesters stormed government buildings on Wednesday over soaring energy prices. The country’s telecom provider shut down internet access, cutting off Bitcoin miners.

Bitcoin may be far more appealing than other cryptos as a store of value, given its hard cap on supply. But it is also competing against other cryptos for investment dollars. The overall market is worth $2.2 trillion, including $450 billion in Ether and $85 billion in Binance Coin. And unlike many cryptos that are finding uses as “smart contracts” for trading cryptos, lending, and minting new digital assets like nonfungible tokens, Bitcoin’s primary use case and appeal may be as an alternative to gold.

Working in Bitcoin’s favor is that investors are now worried about inflation and the impact of soaring global money supplies, potentially depreciating national currencies. That could help Bitcoin in the long run, since its supply is capped at 21 million coins, with 18.9 million already produced.

But Bitcoin hasn’t been acting like an inflation beater lately. Prices have been flat for months.

Bitcoin has done better than gold in the past year: Bitcoin is up 15% from early January 2021, versus a 6.8% decline for the


SPDR Gold Shares

ETF (ticker: GLD). But gold has beaten Bitcoin in the past three months, with the Gold Shares ETF up 6% and Bitcoin slumping about 10%.

Timing, it seems, may matter just as much with digital gold as it does with the real thing.

Corrections & Amplifications

Bitcoin has a market cap of $870 billion. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said the market cap was $870 million.

Write to Daren Fonda at daren.fonda@barrons.com

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Apple and Tesla Suppliers Hit By Global Energy Crisis. What to Know.

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A sign outside an Esso filling station informs the public that it has no fuel on Sept. 25, 2021 in London, England.


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A worldwide energy shortage is threatening to develop into a full-blown crisis.

The scenes in the U.K. over the weekend were reminiscent of the 1970s, as drivers queued at thousands of filling stations amid fears of a fuel shortage, sparked by a lack of truck drivers. But the panic at the pumps is really a sideshow. Natural-gas prices in Europe and around the world have skyrocketed amid shortages, leading to higher household bills and suppliers collapsing.

China is experiencing its own energy crunch as shortages have led to record coal prices and soaring natural-gas costs. It’s beginning to have an impact; production at a number of factories—including some supplying


Apple

and


Tesla

—has been halted.


Nomura

and


China International Capital Corp

have already downgraded Chinese growth forecasts as a result.

Meanwhile, oil prices and energy stocks are gaining early on Monday.


Goldman Sachs

raised its year-end Brent crude price forecast to $90 from $80, also lifting its West Texas Intermediate forecast to $87. Most notably, the bank’s analysts said Hurricane Ida should prove to be “the most bullish hurricane in U.S. history.” They added that the global oil supply-demand deficit is larger than they expected, with the recovery in demand from the Delta coronavirus variant impact faster than anticipated. Throw in the global gas shortage and winter oil demand is firmly skewed to the upside, they said.

The bigger question is whether the energy disruptions will derail the economic recovery or not. In any case, for all the talk of a green energy transition, the unfolding events show the economy is still very much powered by traditional fossil fuels.

Callum Keown

***Join Barron’s senior managing editor Lauren R. Rublin and deputy editor Ben Levisohn today at noon to discuss the outlook for financial markets, industry sectors, and individual stocks. Sign up here.

***

In Congress This Week: Debt Ceiling, Infrastructure Spending

Congress faces several major initiatives this week, including Monday’s Senate vote on federal government funding and the debt ceiling, a House vote on the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill later this week, and ongoing negotiations on the $3.5 trillion bill Democrats expect to pass by reconciliation.

  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the first priority is to avert a government shutdown on Oct. 1. Senate Republicans vowed to block a vote on the House-approved bill to extend government funding through Dec. 3 and suspend the debt limit until late next year.
  • An alternative is to pass a short-term government funding extension—something Republicans could support—and address the debt ceiling in the $3.5 trillion bill, which is focused on President Joe Biden’s social spending and climate change agenda.
  • Pelosi told ABC’s “This Week” that the House will pass the $1 trillion infrastructure bill this week. She also said it’s “self-evident” the $3.5 trillion bill will get smaller during negotiations. Even some Democrats oppose the bill’s size.
  • Pelosi said that despite clashes over details, Democrats “overwhelmingly” support Biden’s economic agenda, including lowering middle class taxes, measures to fight climate change, and tax rises on corporations and the wealthy to pay for it.

What’s Next: The House voted to suspend the debt limit through December 2022, but Republicans want to absolve themselves of the matter, saying Democrats pushed through $1.9 trillion in spending without GOP votes this spring. Democrats say raising the debt limit should be a bipartisan effort, as it was in the past.

Janet H. Cho

***

German Elections Leave No Clear Winner to Succeed Merkel

Germany’s Social Democrats seemed to have won a narrow plurality of votes in Sunday’s parliamentary election, but months of tough negotiations with other smaller parties lie ahead for a coalition government to be formed.

  • Olaf Scholz, the current finance minister and Social Democratic candidate for chancellor, led his SPD party to a 26% victory, according to the latest results. He said he would now attempt to form a government before Christmas with the Green and the Liberal parties, which received 15% and 11.5% of the votes, respectively.
  • Angela Merkel will step down when her successor is appointed. Her conservative party only received 24% of the vote, its worst-ever election result. But conservative candidate Armin Laschet nonetheless hinted he might also try to form a government supported by a majority of the Bundestag, the lower house of Parliament.
  • The various parties have different stances on taxes, fiscal policy, the green transition and economic reforms, so analysts think workable compromises will take weeks, if not months, of tough bargaining.

What’s Next: One of the first results of the election might be that Merkel’s 16-year rule is extended until the end of the year. And that the SPD, if Scholz becomes chancellor, will have to row back on some of its proposals on taxes, and the way to finance the fight against climate change.

Pierre Briançon

***

Chinese Agencies Take Steps to Shield Consumer Funds from Evergrande Crisis

Local governments in China are taking control of


Evergrande
’s
property sales revenue amid an unfolding liquidity crisis at the developer, the Financial Times reported. Stalled development projects this summer sparked complaints and public protests.

  • In a district near Guangzhou, a housing agency asked an Evergrande subsidiary to put presale proceeds from the stalled Sunshine Peninsula residential development into a state-owned custodia account, the report said.
  • An agency in Zhuhai, near Macau, also asked Evergrande to put sales revenue in a government account. As many as eight other provinces have asked Evergrande, since August, to put presale revenue into custodial accounts as it put hundreds of unfinished developments on hold.
  • Evergrande has $300 billion in debt, including $20 billion held offshore. Last week, Evergrande missed a payment on $2 billion of debt, reports said. Separating presale revenue prevents it from being used for debt payments.
  • Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said China is highly levered for a developing economy but that there isn’t a lot of derelict U.S. exposure to Evergrande debt.

What’s Next: Wall Street is worried how an Evergrande failure would affect markets. Property contributes a quarter of China’s economic activity and is a major source of household wealth there. A drop in property prices could hurt consumer confidence and worsen China’s economic slowdown.

Liz Moyer

***

Congestion at Busiest U.S. Ports Causing Shipping Delays Nationwide

The busiest U.S. ports at Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif., are experiencing unprecedented backlogs, with thousands of shipping containers to move and more than 60 ships waiting to dock, contributing to shipping delays nationwide, The Wall Street Journal reported.

  • Shipping demands have increased as businesses replenish their pandemic-depleted inventory, but supply shortages are worsening at apparel maker


    Nike
    ,
    and retailer


    Costco
    ,
    which is limiting paper towel sales.

  • Unlike ports in Asia and Europe that are open around the clock, U.S. ports operate in two shifts on weekdays, because overnight or Saturday shipping is more expensive. Trucking companies are short of drivers to haul boxes, or to load or unload containers from freight trains.
  • In the U.K., thousands of gas stations ran dry Sunday and supermarket shelves were sparsely stocked after a truck driver shortage delayed the delivery of fuel and groceries. The government will issue 5,000 temporary visas for foreign drivers. The British Retail Consortium called it “too little, too late.”
  • To attract more supply-chain workers, logistics providers are raising pay, increasing shift flexibility, and bringing in robots to help with surging e-commerce volumes.


    Walmart
    ,


    Amazon

    and


    United Parcel Service

    are offering signing bonuses, including college tuition help.

What’s Next: Worker shortages are speeding up automation in what were largely manual warehouse and fulfillment operations.


GXO Logistics

added 40% more robotics and automation systems in North America in 2021, with plans to open nine new automated U.S. sites this year for e-commerce.

Janet H. Cho

***

WHO Reviving Investigation Into Origins of Covid-19 With New Scientists

The World Health Organization is reviving its investigation into the origins of Covid-19, which has killed more than 4.7 million people worldwide, assembling a new team of about 20 scientists to search for new clues in China and elsewhere before critical evidence disappears.

  • The U.S. and its allies have urged the WHO to proceed with the investigation, while China has argued that new inquiries should focus on other countries. A previous WHO-led inquiry that visited Wuhan, China, said data from Chinese scientists could not determine when, where and how the virus began.
  • Previous WHO-led teams urged their Chinese counterparts to analyze blood banks, test farmworkers, and study the earliest cases. China and its allies say the investigation should scrutinize other possible sources such as Italy, or a U.S. military bioresearch facility in Fort Detrick, Md.
  • Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs disbanded a task force of scientists investigating the origins of Covid-19, saying its links to the nonprofit EcoHealth Alliance risked perceptions of bias, because it used U.S. funds to study bat coronaviruses with the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
  • Demand for and questions about boosters have increased since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended them for people 65 and older, those with underlying medical conditions, and those at higher risk of infection who received the


    Pfizer


    BioNTech

    vaccine. More than 2.6 million Americans have received boosters.

What’s Next: New York Gov. Kathy Hochul may bring in the National Guard and out-of-state medical workers to fill hospital staffing shortages, as thousands of unvaccinated workers could lose their jobs with Monday’s mandated healthcare worker Covid vaccination deadline looming.

Janet H. Cho

***

MarketWatch Wants to Hear From You

My 76-year-old mother recently moved into assisted living, and she may need to sell her house to cover her expenses. Is there something we can do now to reduce the capital gains on the house in the future, should she outlive her savings?

A MarketWatch correspondent will answer this question soon. Meanwhile, send any questions you would like answered to thebarronsdaily@barrons.com.

***

—Newsletter edited by Liz Moyer, Camilla Imperiali, Steve Goldstein, Rupert Steiner

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Nasdaq to Spin Out Market for Pre-IPO Shares in Deal With Banks

Nasdaq Inc. is teaming up with a group of banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley to spin out its marketplace for shares of private companies.

The deal could help drive more transactions to Nasdaq Private Market, the New York-based exchange operator’s trading platform for shares of companies that haven’t yet had an initial public offering.

Trading in pre-IPO shares has heated up in recent years as startups have waited longer to go public. Employees of such companies often seek to cash out of their shares, while investors may want to get in on a fast-growing technology startup.

Under the deal, Nasdaq Private Market will be moved into a separate, stand-alone company that will receive investments from a group of banks. The group includes Citigroup Inc., Goldman, Morgan Stanley and SVB Financial Group , owner of Silicon Valley Bank. The companies announced the deal Tuesday after it was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

Terms of the transaction weren’t disclosed. Nasdaq said it would remain the joint venture’s largest shareholder.

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Didi Global Prices IPO at $14 a Share

Chinese ride-hailing goliath Didi Global Inc. priced its IPO at $14 on Tuesday afternoon, according to people familiar with the matter, setting the stage for the company to begin trading Wednesday, after it made a lightning-fast pitch to potential investors.

The company sold more stock than it had planned, though the new deal size couldn’t immediately be learned. Given the upsizing, the pricing would give Didi a market capitalization of more than $67 billion, which would trail U.S. ride-hailing firm Uber Technologies Inc.’s roughly $95 billion but land well ahead of Lyft Inc., which sits at roughly $20 billion.

Didi’s fully diluted valuation, which typically includes restricted stock units, would easily eclipse $70 billion at the initial-public-offering price, confirming earlier reports by The Wall Street Journal.

Didi’s pricing comes just three business days after it launched its roadshow, making it one of the shortest investor pitches for an initial public offering in recent memory, according to bankers, investors and lawyers.

Didi ran its roadshow through round-the-clock virtual meetings because of time-zone differences, according to people who participated. Company executives focused on Didi’s scale and potential for continuing growth, the people said. The executives emphasized that 70% of China’s population will live in cities by 2030 and that few people own cars in those cities—and far fewer than in the U.S. Didi argues it is in position to capitalize on that, from shared mobility in general to its investments in electric vehicles and artificial intelligence.

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Goldman, Morgan Stanley Limit Losses With Fast Sale of Archegos Assets

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley were quick to move large blocks of assets before other large banks that traded with Archegos Capital Management, as the scale of the hedge fund’s losses became apparent, according to people with knowledge of the transactions. The strategy helped limit the U.S. firms’ losses in last week’s epic stock liquidation, they said.

Losses at Archegos, run by former Tiger Asia manager Bill Hwang, have triggered the liquidation in excess of $30 billion in value. Banks were continuing to sell blocks of stocks linked to Archegos Monday, traders said.

“This is a challenging time for the family office of Archegos Capital Management, our partners and employees. All plans are being discussed as Mr. Hwang and the team determine the best path forward,” a company spokeswoman said in a statement Monday evening.

Archegos took big, concentrated positions in companies and held some positions in a mix of stock and swaps. Swaps are a common arrangement in which a trader gets access to the returns generated by a portfolio of shares or other assets in exchange for a fee.

Losses threatened to spill over into the so-called prime brokerage businesses that have been handling the firm’s trading. The group of large Wall Street banks includes Goldman, Morgan, Credit Suisse Group AG, Nomura Holdings Inc., UBS Group AG and Deutsche Bank AG , said people familiar with the firm’s trading.

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Short Sellers Boost Bets Against SPACs

Short sellers are coming for SPACs.

Investors who bet against stocks are targeting special-purpose acquisition companies, one of the hottest growth areas on Wall Street. The dollar value of bearish bets against shares of SPACs has more than tripled to about $2.7 billion from $724 million at the start of the year, according to data from S3 Partners.

Some of the stocks under attack belong to large SPACs that surged in recent months, in part because they were backed by high-profile financiers. A blank-check company created by venture capitalist

Chamath Palihapitiya

that plans to merge with lending startup Social Finance Inc. is a popular target, with 19% of its shares outstanding sold short, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The short interest in

Churchill Capital Corp. IV,

a SPAC created by former investment banker

Michael Klein

that is merging with electric-vehicle startup Lucid, more than doubled in March to about 5%.

Others are wagering against companies after they combine with SPACs. Muddy Waters Capital LLC announced last week it was betting against

XL Fleet Corp.

, a fleet electrification company that went public in December after merging with a SPAC. XL has since said Muddy Waters’s report, which alleged XL inflated its sales pipeline and made misleading claims about its technology among other issues, had “numerous inaccuracies.” 

XL’s stock price dropped the day Muddy Waters released its report by about 13%, to $13.86, from its prior close on March 2. Shares closed Friday at $12.79.

Shares of

Lordstown Motors Corp.

fell nearly 17% Friday after Hindenburg Research released a report saying the electric-truck startup had misled investors on its orders and production. The company, which merged with a SPAC in October, said the report contained half-truths and lies. The short interest in Lordstown shares rose to 5% from 3.4% in the week before the report’s publication, according to data from S&P.

“SPACs are an area of focus,” said Muddy Waters’s

Carson Block.

The veteran short seller said SPACs largely make up the universe of companies he views as both “abysmal” and relatively free from technical challenges, such as high short interest, which can make betting against them difficult.

SPACs are shell firms that raise capital by issuing stock with the sole purpose of buying or merging with a private company to take it public. They are dominating the market for new stock issues, becoming a status symbol for celebrities while pumping the value of acquisitions, like betting company

DraftKings Inc.,

into the tens of billions of dollars.

Hedge funds that buy into SPACs early see them as a way to make lofty returns without much risk. Individual investors are attracted by the chance to get positions in newly public companies that they could rarely purchase through traditional IPOs. The Securities and Exchange Commission issued a statement on Wednesday warning that it “is never a good idea to invest in a SPAC just because someone famous sponsors or invests in it.”

A monthslong rally in the stocks lost steam recently amid a broad selloff in technology and high-growth companies. An index of SPAC stocks operated by Indxx fell about 17% from mid-February to March 10, while the Nasdaq Composite Index declined about 7.3% over the same period.

“These are all momentum stocks, and a lot of people want to short them,” said

Matthew Tuttle,

whose firm Tuttle Tactical Management runs an exchange-traded fund that allows investors to hold a portfolio of SPAC stocks. Mr. Tuttle is preparing to launch an ETF that bets against “de-SPAC” stocks of companies that have merged with a SPAC—like electric-truck manufacturer

Nikola Corp.

and baked-goods maker

Hostess Brands Inc.

—and a separate fund that invests in the stocks.

Private companies are flooding to special-purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, to bypass the traditional IPO process and gain a public listing. WSJ explains why some critics say investing in these so-called blank-check companies isn’t worth the risk. Illustration: Zoë Soriano/WSJ

Postmerger companies are particularly attractive to short because they have larger market capitalizations, making their shares easier to borrow, and because early investors in the SPACs are eager to sell shares to lock in profits, analysts and fund managers said.

Short sellers borrow stocks they believe are overvalued and immediately sell them, hoping to repurchase the shares for a lower price when they need to be returned and to pocket the difference. The strategy proved dangerous in recent months when individual investors organized on social media to push up stocks like GameStop Corp., forcing short sellers to buy shares and cap their losses, helping to drive prices still higher.

Continued strong investor demand for SPACs could catch short sellers in a similar squeeze. Shorting SPACs can also be risky because their shares have a natural floor at $10, the price at which they can be redeemed before a merger, and because they are prone to sharp price moves, analysts said.

Still, the portion of shares sold short in SPACs and their acquisitions is climbing.

A blank-check company created by venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya that plans to merge with lending startup Social Finance Inc. is a popular target.



Photo:

Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Some are betting against stocks they believe rose too fast, to unsustainable valuations. The price of bioplastics company

Danimer Scientific Inc.

nearly tripled to $64 in the first six weeks of the year after it was bought by a SPAC. The short interest in Danimer stock has climbed to 8.5% from around 1% in January, and its share price has traded down to about $42, according to data from S&P.

Others are making bearish bets to hedge against potential losses in SPAC stocks they own.

Veteran short seller

Eduardo Marques

cited SPACs and their boosting the number of U.S.-listed stocks as a short-selling opportunity, according to a pitch for a stock-picking hedge fund called Pertento he plans to launch this year. America’s roster of public companies had shrunk from the mid-1990s onward, but that trend has recently reversed, partly because of SPACs.

Their popularity has helped spark new Wall Street offerings.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

this year started offering clients set baskets of similar stocks to short, pitching them as a way to hedge SPAC exposure, people who have seen the offering said. Clients typically customize the baskets Goldman offers, which are thematic and sector-focused, such as on bitcoin and electric vehicles.

Kerrisdale Capital founder

Sahm Adrangi

started shorting postmerger SPAC companies earlier than most, with a public bet in November against the stock of frozen-food maker

Tattooed Chef Inc.,

which still trades above its price at that time. But the stock has fallen about 13% during the recent market slump.

“We saw these stocks go up a lot and now that people are de-risking, these highflying SPACs are coming down to earth,” Mr. Adrangi said.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

How long do you think the SPAC boom will continue, and why? Join the conversation below.

Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com and Juliet Chung at juliet.chung@wsj.com

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