Cryptocurrency Is Interesting But It Won’t Move Facebook Stock

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Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) is reportedly getting into cryptocurrency. The news hasn’t done much for FB stock, which has other issues to deal with. Facebook stock fell more than 7% on June 3 amid news of an Federal Trade Commission investigation.

Cryptocurrency Is Interesting But It Won't Move Facebook Stock
Cryptocurrency Is Interesting But It Won't Move Facebook Stock

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That probe, which mirrors a similar Department of Justice investigation into Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), is the big story for now … and it probably should be. But Facebook’s intentions for cryptocurrency are intriguing. The question is whether they really matter to the FB stock price.

After all, a number of companies have tried to create value in and around cryptocurrency and blockchain. Riot Blockchain (NASDAQ:RIOT) and Eastman Kodak (NYSE:KODK) notably pivoted to the space. Even IBM (NYSE:IBM) has repeatedly touted its efforts in blockchain. None of the efforts have done anything, so far, to drive profits and all three stocks have headed in the wrong direction.

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Still, Facebook might be different. Its existing base of over 2 billion users can amplify its efforts. The company — regulatory and reputational worries aside — will instantly add credibility to the technology. And Facebook is big enough to put money behind the effort and create confidence among users.

For now, however, that latter fact is the problem. Facebook is large. In fact, it’s huge. FB stock has a market value of $478 billion. At the moment, it’s hard to see cryptocurrency moving the needle on that figure even if Facebook’s efforts will be fun to watch.

Facebook and Crypto

News has been dribbling out about Facebook’s intentions for several weeks. Last month, the Financial Times reported that the company had held discussions with several of the big players in cryptocurrency. That even included the Winklevoss twins, who famously sued Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg over the creation of the platform, and who have made several unsuccessful efforts to launch a bitcoin exchange-traded fund.

Two days later, the BBC reported that Facebook planned to launch its cryptocurrency, referred to as GlobalCoin, in the first part of 2020. The FT returned this past weekend with a story that the company had held initial talks with the Commodity and Futures Trading Commission about whether its coin would be regulated by that agency. (The CFTC generally regulates futures, which drive much of current trading in bitcoin. Whether a cash-based Facebook cryptocurrency would fall under its auspices remains somewhat unclear.)