BlackRockâs head of digital assets, Robbie Mitchnick, said that most of the worldâs largest asset managersâ clients arenât considering Bitcoinâs use for daily payments when deciding whether to invest in the asset.
âI think for us, and most of our clients today, theyâre not really underwriting to that global payment network case,â Mitchnick said during a podcast interview published to YouTube on Friday.
âThatâs sort of maybe out-of-the-money-option-value upside,â Mitchnick said.
He said this doesnât mean Bitcoin (BTC) wonât eventually achieve widespread use in payments, but he called that scenario âa little bit more speculative,â stressing that investors are far more focused on the âdigital goldâ or store-of-value thesis.
âA lot needs to happenâ for that to change, says Mitchnick
âThereâs a lot that needs to happen in terms of Bitcoin scaling, Lightning, and otherwise to make that possible,â he said. In August 2024, Galaxy Research suggested that most Bitcoin layer-2 scaling networks, particularly ârollupsâ may not be sustainable in the long term despite their popularity as a promising method to keep Bitcoin payments cheap, fast and decentralized.Â
Meanwhile, Mitchnick said that stablecoins have been âhugely successfulâ in the payments sector. âThey do have massive product market fit as a payment instrument as a way of moving value around efficiently,â he said.Â
âStablecoins have the potential to greatly expand where they are used today, going beyond just the sort of crypto trading ecosystem and DeFi to actually doing retail remittance payments, corporate, multinational, cross-border transactions, and capital market settlement activity,â he said.
He said Bitcoin has a better chance of competing in retail remittance payments than in other areas, but isnât ruling anything out. âAt some point it is possible, but itâs a more speculative thing to underwrite at this point,â he said.Â
Stablecoins are âscaling fasterâ than expected
ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood recently stated that stablecoins âscaling fasterâ than expected is the reason for her recent lowering her 2030 Bitcoin price prediction.
âStablecoins are usurping part of the role that we thought that Bitcoin would play,â she said.Â
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Wood explained that she previously projected Bitcoin could reach $1.5 million by 2030, but with stablecoins now serving many of the use cases she thought Bitcoin would dominate, she said it may make sense to trim that forecast by about $300,000.
âI think emerging markets are huge in this regard and weâre starting to see institutions in the United States focused on new payment rails,â she said.
Tether co-founder Reeve Collins told Cointelegraph in September that he expects âall currencyâ to become stablecoins by 2030 as part of a broader shift that will see all forms of finance go onchain.Â
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