camila October 6, 2021

NEW YORK/LONDON (REUTERS) – Bitcoin, the world’s largest cyrptocurrency in terms of market value, rose on Tuesday (Oct 5), passing the US$50,000 mark for the first time in four weeks and adding to gains this month on mounting institutional interest.

In early September, bitcoin fell below US$50,000 during a broad selloff in shares of cryptocurrency and blockchain-related firms. It fell further in September, hitting a low of US$40,596 on Sept 21.

On Tuesday, bitcoin rose as high as US$50,808.25.

It was last up 2.6 per cent at US$50,498.

Smaller coins, which tend to move in tandem with bitcoin, were also up. Ether rose 1.5 per cent to US$3,434 and XRP was up 2.2 per cent at US$1.0656.

Market participants cited the increase in institutional crypto services from banks and financial institutions to cope with rising investor demand, as one factor driving bitcoin’s surge.

On Tuesday, US Bancorp announced it launched a cryptocurrency custody service for institutional investment managers who have private funds in the United States and Cayman Islands.

On Monday, Bank of America published its first research coverage focused on cryptocurrencies and other digital assets as other mainstream financial institutions strengthen their involvement with the asset class.

“The banks are capitulating one by one,” said Martha Reyes, head of research at digital asset prime brokerage and exchange BEQUANT.

“For those of us working in the space, the fact that it’s too big to ignore is hardly news, and the regulators certainly aren’t ignoring it.”

Investment flows into the sector have been robust except for a few sluggish months in the summer.

Cryptocurrency investment products and funds recorded inflows for a seventh straight week, as institutional investors warmed to more supportive statements from regulators, data from digital asset manager CoinShares showed on Monday.

Specialist crypto tracker and research provider CoinDesk released on Tuesday a review of the market showing a 25 per cent gain for bitcoin and 32 per cent gain for ether during the third quarter.

The report also cited the surge in non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which use blockchain to record the ownership of digital items such as images, videos, collectibles and even land in virtual worlds.

NFT sales surged to US$10.7 billion (S$14 billion) in Q3.

Kraken Intelligence, a research blog from crypto exchange Kraken, noted in its September report on Tuesday that September’s headwinds for bitcoin “appear to have positioned the market to rally higher into and throughout Q4.”

It added that the fourth quarter is bitcoin’s historically best quarter, with an average and median return of 119 per cent and 58 per cent, respectively.