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From crypto to housing, collapse of speculative wealth could refocus investment on real growth

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Investors hoping to make a killing┬аas cryptocurrencies rebounded from this year’s plunge in valuations got a rude surprise last week after one of the most trusted exchanges for crypto trading, FTX, filed for┬аbankruptcy.

But while old-school financial advisers may be tut-tutting at young and inexperienced crypto investors who they say should have known better,┬аthere are new signs a decline in speculative investments may be part of a trend that goes far beyond bitcoin and its many┬аimitators.

Suddenly things like house prices, tech company valuations┬аand fintech innovations, including cryptocurrency,┬аthat so recently seemed to be shooting for the moon are coming back down to Earth.

Get rich slow

Although┬аmany people are getting their fingers burned as soaring┬аspeculative investments slump, there are those who say the trend will benefit the economy.

Instead of encouraging get-rich-quick┬аspeculation, rising interest rates mean a┬аreturn to the old-fashioned kind of┬аinvestments that use money and workers more efficiently to┬аcreate real economic value.

Some experts┬аsay that the most recent bitcoin decline does not mean that the financial innovation of cryptocurrencies has come to a dead end. Nor is┬аhousing or the new┬аtechnology implicit in social media companies such as┬аTwitter or Meta’s┬аmetaverse┬аinnately bad or useless.

But as interest rates rise and money gets tight, suddenly what seemed like an investment that couldn’t lose has been exposed as one where the business model simply does not justify that optimism.

Are they wearing bathing suits? According to a business analogy from multibillionaire investor Warren Buffett, you only know for sure when the tide goes out. (Reuters)

“A rising tide lifts all boats,” goes a familiar┬аbusiness aphorism. But Warren Buffett, a longtime advocate of slow growth, has added another┬аthat has become almost as famous: “Only when the tide goes out do you know who’s been swimming naked.”

But as central bankers raise interest rates, it is not just reckless speculators and mismanaged businesses that┬аare┬аsuffering, said Lisa Forbes, a manager at┬аSEED Winnipeg, a non-profit that teaches business skills and helps to find small loans for new entrepreneurs.

Fear of borrowing

“I’m working with people who [have what]┬аyou probably call … micro businesses,” said Forbes, whose clients often run single-person businesses such┬аas┬аcleaning contracts, small catering services┬аor e-commerce retail.

Forbes grew up in Winnipeg, but her family comes from Peguis First Nation тАФ about 100 kilometres┬аnorth of the city тАФ and many of her clients have indigenous backgrounds. She said rising interest rates are already hurting.

Lisa Forbes, who works with Winnipeg micro-businesses, says rising interest rates are scaring potential small entrepreneurs, discouraging them from taking risks. (SEED Winnipeg)

More and more, small self-financing entrepreneurs are reluctant to leave safe jobs and throw themselves into riskier ventures.

“The incredibly fast increase in interest rates is making it so that we’ve got people that are shy about wanting┬аto get a loan,” Forbes said, adding that can┬аmean their business never starts or┬аis under-capitalized and ultimately unsuccessful.

While much bigger, Software as a Service (SaaS) startups and their venture capital backers тАФ the backbone of recent tech business growth тАФ are also retreating from risk, with┬аreports of North America-wide business failures.

“The fact is that the glut of capital in the past few years has resulted in too many companies in every market,” Nick Mehta, CEO┬аof the software company┬аGainsight, wrote┬аin Inc.com earlier this year.

Wasting┬аscarce resources

Canadian central bankers going back to at least governor David Dodge have worried about whether the economy is using its financial and human resources efficiently. In the past, economists warned that low rates would create zombie companies and prevent the self-renewing process of creative destruction.

Cheap and available money can be a godsend to new┬аentrepreneurs, but┬аMark Kamstra, professor of finance at Toronto’s Schulich School of Business┬аat York University, is one of those who has worried that the cost of borrowing had recently become too low.

Especially as interest rates fell below the rate of inflation, investors┬аwere able to make money doing things that added little value to the economy.

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“This is a feature of low interest rates that’s really very troubling,” Kamstra said┬аafter teaching a class last week. “You’ve got people who’ve an incentive to look for investments that pay very little because you can make money on a one per cent return.”

The extension of that kind of thinking can lead to individuals or businesses borrowing huge amounts of money, called “leverage,” for investments that make no money at all in the hope of eventual profits.┬аHigher interest rates, Kamstra┬аsaid, mean that collectively, we invest our resources more wisely.

He said this same kind of thinking can apply to real estate, where the arithmetic changes as interest rates go up.

“I have friends with $3-million homes, and I say, ‘You are implicitly saying that living there is worth $200,000 a year,'” said Kamstra, who rents. “If I had $100,00, I could rent a palace.”

In a world with scarce resources, he said, it may be┬аa waste to pour money into tech startups or retail businesses or granite countertops┬аthat produce low yields, when instead you could put your money into a more difficult high-yield business such as mining and processing lithium that the world desperately needs to fight climate change.

A new dot-com bubble?

As Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem discussed┬аlast week,┬аone of those scarce resources┬аis human capital, and Kamstra┬аworries┬аmany of his students are going into low-yield technology businesses because they offer stock options and┬аpay well now but might not last. “What if that’s all just kind of a bubble?”

When it comes to cryptocurrency, Kamstra┬аsaid he was skeptical when prices rose to last year’s┬аhighs, but he says that doesn’t rule out their future use as an innovation to┬аreduce┬аthe high┬аcost of finance.

But it’s not just older,┬аtraditional financial experts who are convinced that cheap capital and speculative fever got out of hand in the rush to cryptocurrency.

Larisa Yarovaya, who researches cryptocurrencies and market contagion at the University of Southampton in England, worries that the gamification of online trading platforms may have lured inexperienced investors into excessive risk-taking. (University of Southampton)

“The bitcoin bubble, and the overall hype around cryptocurrency and blockchain technology, can be compared to the dot-com bubble,” Larisa┬аYarovaya, who researches financial technology and market contagion at Britain’s University of Southampton, said in an email interview.

It is no surprise to her that reports of the┬аbankruptcy of crypto platform FTX is causing contagion.

Yarovaya said the┬аgamification of online trading platforms made investing look easy and fun, but as crypto assets shot higher┬аand low rates made returns on other investments seem measly, inexperienced investors were captured by┬аhigh-risk “crypto-exuberance” that was really gambling, not investing.

Large and institutional investors may well┬аbe directed by rising interest rates to abandon speculation in favour of searching out┬аhigher yields and long-term returns, but Yarovaya believes┬аthose who participated in the crypto and meme stock booms may┬аbe unconvinced.

Maybe the slogan “get rich slow” just won’t be as┬аtantalizing to novice investors.

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