Bitcoin is becoming a valuable tool to escape high inflation in countries with less stable currencies, according to Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood.
The investor – whose asset management firm is a long-time bull on AI and blockchain – argued that little-discussed “currency devaluations” are part of what’s driving the asset’s rally this year.
“The Nigerian naira is down fifty, sixty percent in the last nine months,” said Wood during an interview with CNBC on Wednesday.
“There are currency devaluations that people are not talking about,” says Ark Invest CEO @CathieDWood on the rise of $BTC. “I think this is a flight to safety, believe it or not, taking place. A hedge against devaluation. A hedge against loss of purchasing power and wealth.” pic.twitter.com/8NVh5NS9tP
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“Egypt just devalued by 40%, Argentina continuing to devalue… I think this is a flight to safety, believe it or not, taking place,” she argued.
The price of Bitcoin (BTC) has exploded 50% year to date, breaking a new all-time high above $73,000 last month. Wood’s theory around the rally contrasts with that of most analysts who credit the highly successful launch of Bitcoin spot ETFs in January as the primary catalyst – products more accessible to Wall Street investors than the average Argentinian citizen.
Yet Bitcoin’s appeal as an “inflation hedge” asset is often touted within U.S. borders. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink – whose asset manager is behind the top performing Bitcoin ETF – has previously called Bitcoin “digital gold,” and termed its prior rallies as a “flight to quality.”
Wood echoed this view, referencing the March 2023 banking crisis – an event that boosted Bitcoin’s price by 40% as the government agreed to bail out