That news has sparked speculation that
other big companies may soon add bitcoin or other cryptocurrncies to their balance sheets, since bitcoin is generating a significantly higher return than bonds and cash.
Corporate America is validating bitcoin. Payments giants
Square (SQ) and
PayPal (PYPL)let their users buy and sell it. Credit card processing behemoths
Visa (V) and
Mastercard (MA) are also
embracing cryprocurrencies.
And a top strategist at
BlackRock (BLK), the world’s largest asset manager,
said on CNBC this week that the company has “started to dabble” in bitcoin as an investment.
All this has helped spark a wave of buying by average investors. Consumer research firm Piplsay wrote
in a report Thursday that half of the more than 30,000 consumers it surveyed this week about bitcoin said they felt it was “safe” to invest in cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin prices have surged more than 80% so far this year, and investors are enthusiastically scooping up other cryptocurrencies as well. Ethereum, the world’s second largest cryptocurrency with a total value of about $220 billion, has more than doubled this year.
And the price of dogecoin, a currency that originally started as a dog meme-based joke, also has skyrocketed this year following several
bullish tweets about it by Musk and
support from traders on Reddit.