Digital Assets Early Adopters Are The True Passive Investors

 | Aug 08, 2022 12:38

  • Pierre Debru, Head of Quantitative Research & Multi Asset Solutions, Europe Research WisdomTree
  • To invest or not to invest in Digital assets, that is the question!

    Or at least, you might think that it is the question if you have read anything written about the recent drawdown in digital assets. Such a question paints the choice in stark, black-and-white terms: as if the only two choices available were blind trust or complete distrust with nothing in between. There is a far more pertinent question to ask – but it requires a more nuanced perspective.

    Contrast this stance with the recent discussions around the current equity drawdowns and the potential risk of recession are never framed in black and white terms. There is no mention of divesting fully out of equities. In their outlooks or investment commentaries, asset managers discuss: underweighting equities, rotating out of cyclical into defensive stocks, focusing on high-quality companies. All nuanced and thought-out strategies that allow one to apprehend the situation and its many uncertainties.

    Investing, in digital assets or other assets, is no Shakespearean play. Investors never deal in absolutes. It is all about scenarios and probabilities.

    Why should an investment in digital assets be any different? Why would investors not apply the same nuanced approach to their investment in digital assets? Whether one takes a market portfolio approach, mirroring digital assets’ 1% weighting amongst all asset classes, or whether one takes a longer-term approach to benefit from digital assets’ effects on the Sharpe ratio , there are many ways to make an allocation that balances the risks and opportunities of this emerging asset class.

    1% in Digital Assets, the rational choice?

    Not investing in digital assets is, in fact, an active decision. It may reflect a belief that the digital asset space will disappear completely over time. This view could be an ambitious position to take. Digital assets’ market capitalisation reached up to USD$3 trillion in November 2021[1]. Despite the current drawdown, in recent months, the ecosystem and number of use cases have been growing steadily for over a decade. Digital assets’ size is still on par with emerging market small-caps, listed real estate investment trusts (REITs), or global high yield bonds: assets that are part of most asset allocation and portfolios.

    Figure 1 showcases the current market portfolio, that is, the different listed assets available to investors weighted by their total market capitalisation. The total market represents around USD$160 trillion after the recent drop in risky assets, and digital assets represent around 1% of that. To minimize this deviation from the hypothetical Market Portfolio, a passive investor or an uninformed investor should in theory have around a 1% investment in digital assets. This is the rational choice in absence of any view or added information. This is a safe position that allows one to benefit from the continued growth of the space in positive scenarios and that allows one to cap losses (at 1%) in more negative scenarios.

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    Figure 1: Today’s Market Portfolio.