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Report: HSBC CEO Says Bank Is “Not Into Bitcoin”

Published 05/24/2021, 07:27 AM
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Key Takeaways

  • The CEO of HSBC says that the bank is “not into Bitcoin as an asset class,” according to a Reuters report.
  • He explained that Bitcoin’s price volatility has prevented HSBC from promoting the asset class.
  • The viewpoint held by HSBC contrasts the likes of Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) and BNY Mellon (NYSE:BK), which have recently taken steps to adopt Bitcoin.

HSBC’s CEO confirms the bank’s doubts about cryptocurrencies.

HSBC’s Aversions To Bitcoin

HSBC Holdings PLC ADR (NYSE:HSBC) is not planning on adopting Bitcoin, the CEO has confirmed.

Speaking to Reuters, Neil Quinn explained that the asset’s price volatility has stopped the bank from promoting cryptocurrencies to clients. He said:

“Given the volatility we are not into Bitcoin as an asset class, if our clients want to be there then of course they are, but we are not promoting it as an asset class within our wealth management business.”

Quinn went on to say that the bank is “not rushing into stablecoins” for similar reasons. Stablecoins do not fluctuate in price like Bitcoin as they are designed to stay pegged to traditional currencies, like the U.S. dollar.

Quinn’s confirmation comes weeks after it emerged that HSBC had stopped customers from buying shares in MicroStrategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) because they constitute “a virtual currency product.” MicroStrategy holds 92,079 Bitcoin on its balance sheet today; crypto enthusiasts widely criticized the move at the time.

He added that he views Bitcoin as “more of an asset class than a payments vehicle,” and that it is difficult to value because of its volatility. Stablecoins, meanwhile, pose risk because they depend on the asset’s reserve backing, he said.

HSBC’s views on Bitcoin differ from those of many of the world’s leading investment banks. In recent months, BNY Mellon, Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), and Goldman Sachs have all taken steps to embrace the digital assets space. Goldman published a report on cryptocurrencies last week, investigating the asset’s potential as an “institutional asset class.”

Quinn’s point about the volatility has been proven over the last few days, though. Bitcoin was down 21.9% in the last week after plummeting on news of China’s regulatory crackdown, and Ethereum was down 37.2%. The rest of the market was shaky over the weekend, with some leading DeFi assets falling 25% or more.

“It is too early to call the end of the recent Bitcoin downtrend,” JP Morgan wrote in a Friday report.

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