After recording a 1,200 percent increase in the amount the firm had raised across three quarters in 2017, Michael Sonnenshein, managing director of Grayscale Investment stated that the substantial 69 percent drop in the price of Bitcoin had minimal impact on the company’s client base.
“Bitcoin prices doing nothing but go down the entire year has not deterred our existing clients from putting more capital to work. Asset inflows are really strong despite these price declines. Investors are taking the pullback as an opportunity to increase their exposure. The price has not slowed down the pace of investments — it’s actually caused us to broaden our relationships.”
As a publicly tradable instrument provider of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ethereum Classic, and Zcash that allow investors in the stock market to invest in the cryptocurrency market, Grayscale has a strong reputation as a digital asset asset manager and investment firm.
But, over the last several months, other major cryptocurrency hedge funds such as Pantera Capital and former Point72 portfolio manager Travis Kling-founded Ikigai Asset Management have raised over $100 million to invest in the asset class.
The cryptocurrency sector has fallen by a significant margin within a 11-month period, but to many investors exploring the asset class as a long-term investment opportunity, the correction of the market has been considered an opportunity.
Throughout the past 10 years, the cryptocurrency market recorded four major corrections, all of which demonstrated drops of over 80 percent in valuation. Hence, as Travis Kling emphasized, the cryptocurrency market is merely at the start of exponential growth and the correction is a viable opportunity for new investors to enter.
“Same as that earlier invention, I believe crypto will create trillions of dollars along the way. Already the market for virtual coins is valued at hundreds of billions of dollars. And it’s all just getting started. So I left Point72, billionaire Steven A. Cohen’s hedge fund, in December to continue my investing career, but in a new asset class,” Kling wrote on August 1.
In August, Pantera Capital raised more than $100 million and is targeting to raise $75 million more to establish a venture capital-style fund to invest in cryptocurrency startups.
Over 140 investors participated in the $100 million fund of Pantera with a 10-year long-term vision to invest in the cryptocurrency industry and emerging startups rather than cryptocurrenies like Bitcoin and Ethereum.
However most of these investors for big finance corporations are not really tech savy people but more middle aged people who probably called their agent and said "get into that crypt business whatever that is" and what not and the money didn't directly went into bitcoin but actually went to companies like grayscale and that is why we are not seeing these so called increases even after big investments.