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Bigger bitcoin HODL: Time for 10% to 40% of portfolio in crypto, say financial advisor Ric Edelman
Bigger bitcoin HODL: Time for 10% to 40% of portfolio in crypto, say financial advisor Ric Edelman

CNBC

time16 hours ago

  • Business
  • CNBC

Bigger bitcoin HODL: Time for 10% to 40% of portfolio in crypto, say financial advisor Ric Edelman

Four years ago, financial advisor Ric Edelman went out on a limb in saying everyone should hold cryptocurrencies. But how much? Low single-digits was his recommendation. In his "The Truth about Crypto" book in 2021, Edelman said as low as a 1% allocation was reasonable. A lot has changed. This week, Edelman said financial advisors should be recommending anywhere from 10% to 40% allocations to cryptocurrencies, and he is aware it's quite a shift in his own thinking. "Today I am saying 40%, that's astonishing," he told CNBC's Crypto World in an interview. "No one has ever said such a thing." But the "why" is the more important thing. For one, it's because of the massive change, "the evolution of crypto in the past four years," he said. Four years ago, Edelman says, we didn't know if governments would ban bitcoin, or if the technology would be obsolete, and if consumers and institutions would adopt it. "Today, all those questions have been resolved," said Edelman, who heads the Digital Assets Council of Financial Advisors. "It's radically changed and is now a mainstream asset," Edelman added. For sure, the more mainstream crypto becomes, the more it will feature across investment portfolios. Bitcoin ETFs have been taking in billions this year, among the top asset classes in ETF inflows this year, one sign of crypto's arrival on the radar of more financial advisors and long-term investors. The other big shift Edelman sees longer-term, and just as important to his view of crypto allocation, is the end of the traditional 60/40 model of long-term investing, with 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds, which Edelman says is obsolete due to increased longevity, and life expectancy in the U.S., that has risen from 47 in the 1900s to 85 today, and is projected to potentially reach as high as 100 over the next 30 years if technological advances related to medicine proceed. "If you're a financial advisor and you had a 30 year-old client who was saving for their long term future, you would tell them to put 100% of their money in stocks, because they have 50 years to go," said Edelman. "Today's 60 year-old is kind of like yesterday's 30 year-old," he added. "You need to get better returns than you can get from bonds and you need to hold equities longer than ever before," Edelman said. And as that allocation model shifts away from the classic 40% bond allocation, he said crypto needs to play a much bigger role in investing. "Bitcoin prices don't move in sync with stocks or bonds or gold or oil or commodities," Edelman said. He added that investors are starting to recognize it as a "wonderful way to improve modern portfolio theory statistics. "The crypto asset class offers the opportunity for higher returns that you're likely to get in virtually any other asset class." Edelman said. Some analysts predict bitcoin will hit $150,000-$250,000 by the end of this year and $500,000 by the end of this decade. Edelman says, "that's a conservative estimate compared to what others are saying." Crypto hacks hit a new record in the first half of the year. According to TRM Labs, bad actors raked in over $2.1 billion in at least 75 different hacks and exploits, setting a new record. Attacks on crypto infrastructure, like stealing private keys and seed phrases or compromises of front-end software, accounted for over 80 percent of the funds stolen in 2025's first half. Trump housing advisor tells CNBC about crypto mortgage plan. Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, joined CNBC's "Money Movers" on Friday to discuss the plan he released this week to have Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac count crypto as a federal mortgage asset. Senate targets end of September for crypto bill. Senator Tim Scott, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said at an event on Thursday that legislation to establish rules for U.S. crypto markets will be finished by the end of September.

What's driving Wall Street stablecoin interest? Trillions, and maybe biggest global money-moving shift since credit cards
What's driving Wall Street stablecoin interest? Trillions, and maybe biggest global money-moving shift since credit cards

CNBC

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • CNBC

What's driving Wall Street stablecoin interest? Trillions, and maybe biggest global money-moving shift since credit cards

After a brief pullback this week, shares of stablecoin issuer and recent IPO darling Circle were in rally mode again, soaring double-digits on a percentage basis in trading on Thursday, after having moved up by more than 600% percent since its debut on the New York Stock Exchange earlier this month. Bitcoin and ether have led a recent crypto rise, as digital assets joined the resumption of the risk-on rally, with additional factors such as the potential for lower interest rates later this year, some more moderate talk from the White House on tariffs, and at least temporary easing of tensions in the Middle East. But when it comes to Circle and the stablecoin boom, there's a more fundamental driver as Wall Street interest in the technology continues to evolve: more action in the space. For example, Fiserv debuted a stablecoin earlier this week. Mastercard then linked that stablecoin to its network. Credit cards are a good place to understand the opportunity, according to Zach Abrams, Bridge co-founder and CEO, who told CNBC's MacKenzie Sigalos that the market is estimated to grow into the trillions and could be the biggest global money-moving shift since the introduction of credit cards. Some of the top private companies are already making major use of stablecoins today. Abrams cited the example of ScaleAI, into which Meta just invested over $14 billion, and which uses Bridge to pay data labelers all over the world. SpaceX also uses Bridge to convert payments made for its Starlink internet services in local currencies and bring it back to the U.S. "We think that stablecoins are an entirely new money-movement platform, like credit cards were decades ago," he said in an interview for Thursday's "Crypto World." "[Credit cards] created trillions in value and I think stablecoins will be the same," he said. "We think it's going to be a very big change that will play out over many years," he added. Bridge was recently acquired by private fintech giant Stripe for $1.1 billion. Abrams said as regularity clarity increases, more traditional financial players will want to get in on the opportunity. Stablecoins, less than a decade old, are today a $400 billion market, and Abrams says that if, as most banks think, the market "will get to a few trillion" it is a market where peeling off some of that share has to be a focus. Today, it is served almost entirely by Tether and Circle, he said. Ultimately, there is a role not just for big financial firms like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, but Fiserv and local banks. In fact, the move up to trillions in stablecoin market value won't happen, Abrams said, without "a huge percentage" being handled by traditional financial institutions. Wall street's embrace of tokenization keeps growing in other ways as well. New York-based investment startup Republic announced on Thursday it will allow users to buy tokens that represent private companies like SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic. Republic will offer these tokens for a minimum of $50, lower than the roughly $10,000 typically required for investing in private companies. In other crypto news of note on Thursday: Ripple and the SEC can't put their legal battle behind them, yet. A federal judge rejected the joint motion by the crypto firm and the regulator to endorse Ripple's reduced $50 million fine to settle the civil lawsuit over the alleged sale of unregistered securities, saying they lacked the authority to make the deal. Ripple-linked cryptocurrency XRP was down over 2% on Thursday. Ripple's chief legal officer Stu Alderoty laid out the company's options in an X post. Also, more from "Crypto World" on the news that first broke yesterday that the Trump administration is working to let home buyers include their crypto in federal mortgage applications.

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