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Ruffer revealed on Tuesday that it had sold its $600-million position for $1.1 billion, citing concerns over excessive speculation across the cryptocurrency market.
United Kingdom-based fund manager Ruffer liquidated its $600-million Bitcoin (BTC) bet after growing nervous about the speculative frenzy in the cryptocurrency market, including huge rallies in meme-based tokens such as Dogecoin (DOGE).
The fund, which manages roughly $34 billion for wealthy clients and charities, started selling its cryptocurrency stash in December 2020, when the BTC/USD exchange rate rose to $25,000, the Sunday Times reported.
It continued selling as the pair established newer highs in January 2021, breaking past the $40,000 level. Ruffer had wound up its remaining Bitcoin position by April, netting $1.1 billion in profits from the sales, or an 83% return for the fund.
Dogecoin FUD
Rufferâs sequential Bitcoin dumps appeared in moments that saw analysts predicting greater valuations for the flagship cryptocurrency. For instance, JPMorgan said in a report published in January that BTC/USD could rise to $146,000 as it competes with gold to become the worldâs leading inflationary hedge.
Guggenheim Partners chief investment officer Scott Minerd also called for a $400,000â$600,000 Bitcoin, believing that the cryptocurrency would be able to mousetrap goldâs market in the long run.
Ruffer clarified that it would consider repurchasing Bitcoin as an insurance against inflation, with its investment director Duncan MacInnes telling the Financial Times that it would be assessing the markets âfrom the sidelines than from in the trenches.â
But for now, MacInnes agreed, Bitcoin is too hot to hold especially when Dogecoin, a joke-based cryptocurrency, is valued at $40 billion. He said:
âItâs hard to say the froth has come out.â
Dogecoin, a satirical homage to Bitcoin, underwent a wild upside rally in 2021 as it rose 15,337% year-to-date at one point in time.
Supportive tweets from Tesla CEO Elon Musk emerged as some of the leading catalysts behind the Dogecoin price rally, including reshared July 2020 meme showing the cryptocurrency storming the global financial system.
Itâs inevitable pic.twitter.com/eBKnQm6QyF
â Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 18, 2020
But the retail frenzy started dying in May after Musk called Dogecoin a âhustleâ on a Saturday Night Live episode. The billionaire entrepreneurâs U-turn on the token caused panic selling across the cryptocurrency market, hinting that loss-making traders attempted to cash out gains from still-profitable cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.
Dogecoin fell 30% instantly after Muskâs statement. As of Wednesday, the cryptocurrency was trading more than 50% lower than its all-time high of $0.76.
Dogecoinâs classic head-and-shoulders pattern suggests massive declines ahead. Source: TradingView
âYou could see very clearly that there was a rise in speculative behavior,â said MacInnes while pointing at Bitcoinâs own rise from $30,000 to almost $65,000 amid the Dogecoin retail frenzy. Nevertheless, he added that at least the benchmark cryptocurrencyâs boom had some rationality behind it.
Bitcoin âon the menuâ
Lower-yielding bonds and devaluated fiat currencies left investors without a better traditional safe-haven asset. As a result, their traditional 60/40 portfolio strategy returned nothing, which led them to ânew safe-haven, uncorrelated assetsâ like Bitcoin.
Bitcoin struggles to reclaim previous support waves (green and orange). Source: TradingView
Ruffer has shifted its funds to Bitcoin-rivaling anti-inflation assets, including gold, inflation-protected bonds and commodity stocks. The firm asserted that it would keep the cryptocurrency âon the menuâ for the future.
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