Why Would You Risk Buying Bitcoin Right Now? My Contrarian Take

 | Jul 19, 2022 21:49

Bitcoin is a hot topic lately. It’s been in the news a lot, and not for good reasons. In fact, it’s currently down 72% from its all-time high of $69,000 in November.

Investments that are more volatile are viewed by the general public as risky. Conventional wisdom tells us things like “the trend is your friend” and “don’t try to catch a falling knife”. These are true — so the contrarian take for bitcoin is not because of these or refuting them, but in fact regardless of them.

It seems like the worst time to buy bitcoin. And if you believe that, you probably shouldn’t.

However, if you are a contrarian, hear me out.

Here are five reasons why accumulating at least 5% of your savings in bitcoin is needful.

Bitcoin Reason #1 — Growth Beats Volatility/h2

The first reason you should buy bitcoin is that historically it has appreciated over time, a lot faster than older assets like gold, real estate, stocks or bonds. Past performance does not guarantee future results, however in market analysis we operate off of numbers of the past. Growth over a longer time frame removes volatility as a risk.

Let’s look at a comparison outside of bitcoin.

Some assets are more volatile than other assets.

For example, stocks are more volatile than bonds. This is a short-term risk. However, over longer periods of time, this risk becomes less. In fact stocks simply outperform bonds by a massive margin long-term.

Inflation is a risk that is usually ignored by investors, though its hard to ignore it right now. It eats away at all assets. Historically, in the US, inflation has been around 3% annually. Over the past 12 months, it has been 9.1%. In emerging markets like Nigeria, South Africa, India and Brazil, inflation has been historically a lot higher.

Over a 10–20 year time frame holding assets that return less than 3% annually is actually a far greater risk than volatility.

In November 2013, bitcoin exploded over 550% in a single month from a little over $200 to $1,100. What followed was a lengthy bear market for over 3 years, dropping back to around $200 before eventually rising again. That sounds really volatile, but that time period, which covers more than ⅓ of this graph, is hardly noticeable.