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Bitcoin clears another record: Is now the time to invest?

Bitcoin (BTC-USD) continues to shatter records in 2024 after a brutal crypto winter that began two years earlier. The world's largest cryptocurrency reached beyond $106,000 for the very first time early in the morning on Dec. 16. Bitcoin’s record price puts it up about 53% since the presidential election.

Bitcoin's price exceeded the $70,000 mark for the first time in March 2024. Driving the surge was the SEC’s approval of new bitcoin spot ETFs, or exchange-traded funds, that made it easier to invest in bitcoin with a brokerage account, or even a retirement account.

Bitcoin's price hit the $70,000 mark again when the first ethereum ETFs started trading in July after getting the green light from the SEC two months earlier.

As bitcoin becomes more mainstream and clears new records, is it time to join the party? Proceed with caution.

Yahoo Finance video: What's the right crypto allocation in your portfolio?

What’s the big deal about bitcoin ETFs?

In early 2023, a Pew Research Center survey found that 75% of Americans who’d heard of cryptocurrency said they weren’t confident in its safety or reliability.

But the price of the world’s largest cryptocurrency began climbing again later that year after a federal appeals court ruled that the SEC wrongfully rejected an application from Grayscale Investments to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust into a spot bitcoin ETF. The SEC said in October 2023 that it wouldn’t appeal the court ruling.

And in January, it gave the OK to nearly a dozen new exchange-traded funds called spot bitcoin ETFs. Spot ETFs own the underlying asset — like gold, silver, or now bitcoin — and closely track its price, minus trading costs or fees.

Learn more: Gold is hovering near all-time highs. Here's how investors can play the craze.

“There have not been any ETFs like this before,” said Ric Edelman, founder of the Digital Assets Council of Financial Professionals. “There are ETFs that invest in stocks of companies that do business in the crypto industry, such as exchanges and miners, and there are ETFs that trade futures in bitcoin, which is like buying equity options instead of stocks, but until now there have not been any ETFs that directly invest in and own bitcoin.”

The SEC’s decision allows investors to get direct exposure to bitcoin without going through a crypto exchange or dealing with the headache of storage or security issues. Instead, investors can easily gain bitcoin exposure by owning shares in their brokerage accounts, including individual retirement accounts (IRAs).

“The new spot bitcoin ETFs are widely viewed as the safest from a custody perspective because the ETFs are regulated by the SEC, and they handle the safeguarding of your bitcoin for you,” Edelman said.

Read more news: The 4 groups of bitcoin people to know: Morning Brief

Does bitcoin belong in an investment portfolio?

With all the hype surrounding bitcoin, it’s understandable if you’re tempted to buy in. But there’s a lot you need to know first before you try to profit off the volatile price.

Learn more: Your guide to start investing in 2025

Bitcoin is still a speculative asset

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are speculative investments, which are assets that people put money into, hoping the price will rise rapidly. Sometimes, speculative assets are called nonproductive assets because they don’t generate any income, like interest, dividends, or earnings. Investors who buy speculative assets are typically seeking to profit off short-term price fluctuations.

“Normally, the way you think about a financial asset is you’re providing capital to the company,” said Michael Finke, a professor of wealth management who holds the Frank M. Engle Distinguished Chair in Economic Security at The American College of Financial Services. “The company uses that capital to make something, and the people buy it. That creates profit. You can value the company based on the profitability you expect in the future. With bitcoin, it’s not producing anything, so the valuation is entirely speculative.”

Cryptocurrencies don’t earn dividends

That may not seem like a big deal if you’ve been watching the price of bitcoin tick higher and higher over time. Who needs dividends or interest given that bitcoin’s price has surged more than 600% in the past five years?

You might think that the price of bitcoin can keep going up forever. After all, the stock market has a solid track record of rising over long periods of time. But keep in mind that, unlike a company whose stock you might buy, bitcoin isn’t creating a product or service that people actually use. Even as a payment method, its usage is extremely limited.

Learn more: Nvidia's market value is up 195% over 11 months. Is it still a good time to invest?

Also, much of the wealth historically generated by the stock market has come from reinvestment rather than rising stock prices. As dividends get reinvested — which usually happens automatically in most 401(k)s and many automated brokerage accounts — you’re buying more shares, allowing your money to compound and earn even more over time.

About 69% of the S&P 500 index’s total return between 1960 and 2022 came from dividends rather than price gains, according to research by Hartford Funds. Put another way, a $10,000 investment in the S&P 500 in 1960 would have been worth more than $4 million by the end of 2022. But without dividend reinvestment and compounding, the same investment would have only been worth about $641,000.

Since bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies don’t earn dividends, any returns you earn will have to come from price appreciation alone.

“People tend to get attracted to things that have gone up recently,” Finke said. “And that’s attractive to anybody who’s investing, but particularly those who tend to be more sentiment-driven investors. They see the price go up and they think they want to be part of it. There’s always that fear of missing out.”

Bitcoin’s price remains highly volatile

Bitcoin is far more volatile than the overall stock market. That can be exciting when the price is on a tear, like the one we’ve seen in recent months.

But when times are bad, bitcoin’s price often takes a much harder fall compared to stocks. Take 2022, which was generally an awful year for stocks, with the S&P 500 plunging around 19%. In the same year, bitcoin lost over 60% of its value.

Edelman stresses that bitcoin is highly speculative, with a history of volatility, but he believes its potential makes it appropriate for a long-term portfolio, provided that investors limit it to 1% to 5%.

“The risks are high, and if it fails, a low single-digit allocation won’t cause material harm,” he said. “And thanks to the potential for outsized returns, a small allocation can have a big impact on your overall investment returns.”

Learn more: How does Nvidia make money?

Bitcoin is not the diversifier it used to be

Still, one common reason for investing in bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is for portfolio diversification. Spreading risk across multiple asset classes can reduce your overall risk of major losses.

The relationship between stock and cryptocurrency prices has long been debated. But recent research suggests that stock and bitcoin prices are becoming more correlated, which means they’re increasingly moving in the same direction.

A 2023 working paper by the International Monetary Fund states that bitcoin and stock prices “are fairly uncorrelated before 2020, then increasingly correlated from the second half of 2020.” One potential explanation is that institutional investors are more likely to have exposure to both bitcoin and stocks.

Researchers at Georgetown University noted a growing correlation between bitcoin and the S&P 500, particularly in times of crisis. The paper states that the correlation “significantly increased during COVID, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the crypto winter, indicating that Bitcoin failed to serve as a hedging asset during these events.”

Bitcoin probably isn’t coming to your 401(k)

Don’t expect your 401(k) administrator to start offering bitcoin anytime soon. Fidelity and a smaller administrator called FORUSALL have both been offering employers the option to let plan participants invest a small portion of their retirement money in cryptocurrency.

Learn more: How to do a 401(k) rollover and what to consider

But Finke doesn’t expect plans will make crypto widely available to employees, even with the new bitcoin ETFs. Plan sponsors have a fiduciary duty, meaning they’re obligated to act in participants’ best interests. One of those responsibilities is to minimize the risk of substantial losses.

“Plan sponsors are very cautious and their consultants are very cautious about adding investment options to the core menu of a plan,” Finke said.

In fact, the U.S. Department of Labor has warned 401(k) plan administrators to exercise caution before offering crypto assets in their retirement plans, noting in a March 2022 memo that it can be “extraordinarily difficult, even for expert investors, to evaluate these assets and separate the facts from the hype.”

Learn more: How much can you contribute to your 401(k) in 2025?

So, should you invest in bitcoin?

Ultimately, investing in bitcoin is a personal decision, whether you’re buying ETFs or actual digital coins. If you decide to invest, you should have an already diversified portfolio of assets like index funds. You typically don’t want to invest money in speculative assets you can’t afford to lose.

Before you buy bitcoin, think about what’s motivating you: Do you believe bitcoin has potential long-term investment value? Or is it a case of FOMO, or fear of missing out?

“Investors who get attracted to shiny things because they’ve gone up in value a lot recently tend to get consistently punished,” Finke said. “This recent run-up in bitcoin seems like a perfect example of a shiny object that has attracted a lot of attention from investors but may not really perform that well in the future.”