BITQ ETF: A Safer Way To Dip Into The Volatile Cryptocurrency Market

 | Jun 02, 2022 16:24

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Cryptos in an ugly trend since November 2021
  • Buying on ugly corrections proven optimal approach
  • Many investors uncomfortable with crypto wallets
  • BITQ is a crypto stew
  • BITQ should follow Bitcoin and crypto prices

Turning a five-cent investment into more than $31,500 in 12 years is astonishing in any market. If you had spent $1 on Bitcoin in 2010 and held on to it, you would have a cool $630,000 today. Returns like that are nothing to sneeze at. And at Bitcoin's high in November 2021, that $1 would have been worth $1.38 million.

While some high-profile devotees embrace cryptocurrencies as the means of exchange for the future, detractors call the asset class evil and worthless. Passions run high on both sides, contributing to the price volatility. Meanwhile, more and more analysts and financial advisors are recommending a small exposure to the asset class.

As investors and speculators look to move some percentage of their nest eggs into the burgeoning arena, there are alternatives to how to participate. The most direct route is to buy tokens, but there are more than 19,670 cryptocurrencies from which to choose. Plus, after purchasing crypto, the next issue is whether to keep it in a wallet in cyberspace or on an exchange that acts as a custodian.

Companies and ETF products trading on the stock market that move higher and lower with crypto values now provide an alternative. These products eliminate the custodial problems as they can sit in traditional portfolios.

I like to call the Bitwise Crypto Industry Innovators ETF (NYSE:BITQ) a Bitcoin stew, as it holds a variety of companies that have long-side exposure to the asset class.

h2 Cryptos In An Ugly Trend Since November 2021/h2

On Nov. 10, 2021, Bitcoin and Ethereum, the two cryptocurrencies that account for more than 60% of the market cap for the total asset class, reached all-time highs. The day they reached those highs, they closed the session below the previous day’s low, putting in bearish key reversal patterns on the daily charts—an ominous sign.