Crypto Investment Firm Grayscale Brings In $330 Million Even as Market Sags
*by Tanaya Macheel*
Next year may signal a more widespread adoption of crypto among institutional investors ー if the current momentum continues, that is.
Grayscale, a veteran digital currency investment firm, saw record inflows, $330 million in the first three quarters of 2018 ー most of which came from institutional investors including hedge funds, endowments and pensions, according to the managing director.
“That’s against nothing but price decline,” which investors are using as “a time to create \[an\] initial position or start scaling into a position” in Bitcoin or other crypto assets, Michael Sonnenshein told Cheddar on Friday.
In the third quarter, 73 percent of inflows were into the Bitcoin Investment Trust, while 27 percent were into Grayscale products tied to other digital assets, according to Grayscale’s third-quarter Digital Asset Investment Report, published Thursday.
For the year to date, Bitcoin accounted for 66 percent of total assets raised and 34 percent went into other digital assets.
Most of Grayscale’s capital inflows are going to its Bitcoin product because investors are most familiar and comfortable with it. Eight of Grayscale’s nine different products are for single currencies ーlike Bitcoin or XRP. The ninth is a bundle that offers exposure to the largest digital currencies by market cap.
“We’re starting to see a lot more interest in those types of structures, especially in the wake of seeing other firms shut down their index products,” Sonnenshein said of the large cap fund.
“A lot of folks want to generally allocate to the space and not have to choose winners or avoid losers and like the idea of the large cap fund for that very reason.”
Since late last year’s run-up, when the price of Bitcoin reached nearly $20,000, Fidelity, the third-largest asset manager in the world, announced plans to launch a crypto custody and institutional brokerage business. Goldman Sachs announced plans to open a crypto trading operation. Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, has entered the crypto industry through a new company called Bakkt. Earlier this week, Morgan Stanley released a bullish report on cryptocurrencies, hailing Bitcoin and other digital assets as a "new institutional investment class.”
“The once taboo nature of investing in digital currencies has been shrugged off by most investors. When we go sit down with our hedge fund clients, endowments, whatever they may be, there is so much knowledge on the other side of the table that, to us, is really validating," Sonnenshein said.
For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/morgan-stanley-says-cryptocurrencies-are-a-new-asset-class).
Heila Technologies, a startup that develops hardware and software to integrate renewables and batteries on a microgrid, is helping to power the first clean energy microgrid for Auto Mercado, a top supermarket chain in Costa Rica. The plant will reduce 20 tons of CO2 emissions per year. Heila Technologies CEO Francisco Morocz joins Cheddar Climate to discuss.
GitLab CFO Brian Robins joined Cheddar's "Closing Bell" to discuss the single platform software development app's first earnings report since going public in October. The company frames itself as a one-stop-shop for businesses to transition into software development to manage in-network chat, video conferencing, and meeting scheduling among other applications. GitLab saw Q3 revenue jump 58 percent and was able to add a number of new customers since its IPO.
Bitcoin had a tough last few days. In just a 24-hour period spanning early Friday morning to early Saturday morning, bitcoin's price went from about $57,000 to $47,000. Patrick McCconlogue, CEO of Overline, joins Cheddar News discuss bitcoin's plunge.
The leading gaming organization and lifestyle brand 100 Thieves just raised $60 million in new funding closing its Series C. This new round of funding has raised the valuation of the organization to about $460 million. John Robinson, president and COO of 100 Thieves, joins Cheddar News to talk about what's next for the company.
Online platform Assemble is looking to provide career instruction and inspiration to Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) of all age groups for access to industries they might not have been privy to prior. Actor, activist, and one of Assemble's three co-founders, Jesse Williams, and CEO Cortney Woodruff joined Cheddar's "Between Bells" to discuss the Assemble mission and what people can expect from the program. "There's a lot of jobs that folks don't know even exist in the first place, and what we know is that there are incredible innovators at the peak of their field that are Black and brown – in every single field," Williams noted.
Payoneer CEO Scott Galit joined Wake Up With Cheddar to talk about the company's partnership with Walmart to provide working capital to retailers on Walmart's marketplace.
Between uncertainty over the Omicron variant, and the possibility of a sooner-than-expected taper from the Fed, it was an especially volatile week for the markets. The release of the November jobs report on Friday, with job growth coming in way lower than estimates also caused movement on the market. Frances Stacy, Director of Strategy at Optimal Capital explains why all of this, combined with Bitcoin’s huge drop over the weekend, could make for another rough week for investors.
Ahead of Instagram head Adam Mosseri's congressional hearing on the mental impact of the social platform on teens, the company announced a number of updates aimed at teen safety.
Developers for the video game "Call of Duty: Warzone" staged a walkout in protest of 12 quality assurance testers being laid off by parent company Activision Blizzard. This marks the latest work stoppage for the embattled game publishing giant.