Banking On Crypto

 | Aug 25, 2021 16:32

We examine how banks are moving in on a patch of fintech turf: cryptocurrencies.

At first glance this appears to be counterintuitive. There are several aspects of cryptocurrencies that one might expect to put banks off: the legal and regulatory uncertainty and price volatility (excluding stablecoins) to name but two.

h2 Banks and Investors Appear to Be Embracing Bitcoin/h2

These remain risks, but banks are nonetheless wading into the crypto market. In March, Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) opened up three bitcoin funds to individual investors with at least $2 million in assets with the bank and institutions with at least $5 million with the bank. Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) followed suit in May. In June, JP Morgan also began offering bitcoin funds, and in a move that seems likely to be emulated, made the funds available to all clients.

These steps come in response to both individual and institutional customer demand and after successful hedge fund investors Stan Druckenmiller and Ray Dalio both described bitcoin as a digital version of gold in terms of its function within a portfolio, i.e. as an asset class to which investors seek exposure.

However, it is one thing for cryptocurrencies to be embraced by hedge fund managers. It is quite another for them to be embraced by bulge bracket banks. Banks are highly regulated, which means these moves tell us (at least) two things. The first is that some bankers themselves see some merit in cryptocurrencies and the second is that so do bank regulators. If the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Department of the Treasury, or any other agency had suggested even mild disapproval, then it is highly unlikely that any bank—but especially the bulge bracket banks—would be going down this road.

Sitting just outside the bulge bracket segment, U.S. Bancorp announced several cryptocurrency initiatives in April, although these were less attention-grabbing as they were centered on custody and general distributed ledger efforts.

h2 Smaller Banks Want in On the Action/h2

Some even bolder crypto strategies are percolating at smaller banks. The most notable case, at least in the U.S., is Silvergate Capital Corp (NYSE:SI). The bank’s Silvergate Exchange Network enables around-the-clock, real-time U.S. dollar-cryptocurrency conversion, as well as facilitating real-time stablecoin mint/burn transactions. Silvergate also provides cryptocurrency custodial services, as well as loans collateralized by bitcoin.

The fact that bank efforts in the world of cryptocurrencies mostly range from “embryonic” to “vaporware” means that there is little hard data to judge their success. FactSet consensus analyst estimates for Silvergate’s earnings and book value do, however, offer some insight into how analysts who follow the company are thinking about Silvergate’s achievements and outlook.

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With most of 2021 already in the books, the consensus expectation is for earnings per share (EPS) to more than double this year and to nearly quadruple in the three-year period ending December 2023.