Small investors have started to ease back into crypto, even if they’re not yet rushing in headfirst the way they did during the last bull market three years ago.
At the biggest US crypto exchange, Coinbase Global Inc., net consumer transaction revenue rose 60% in the fourth quarter from the year-ago period, and was up 80% over the third quarter, according to a shareholder letter released Thursday. At Robinhood Markets Inc., which reported on Feb. 13 and is focused on retail users, crypto notional volumes in December jumped by 242% from a year ago, the company said.
These are just the latest signs that mom-and-pop traders, who lost billions of dollars after crypto-price collapse in 2022, may be starting to come back, thanks to the exuberance surroundingthe January launch of US exchange-traded funds investing directly in bitcoin. The price of bitcoin more than doubled last year amid the hoopla, and the lure of even bigger gains is making some consumers forget just how volatile crypto can be.
“There are signs that the retail audience is starting to get back into the market, but not nearly to the extent of the last bull market yet,” said Kyle Doane, a trader at Arca. “Even crypto stocks like COIN and miners are exhibiting more volatility than many tokens.”
Retail traders are critical to crypto. They accounted for a lion’s share of revenues on Coinbase during the last bull run, and are a key revenue driver for most other crypto exchanges as well.
In a sign that retail investors are not fully in yet, Web searches for the word “bitcoin” — a metric that Wall Street analysts use to track retail interest in the market — spiked in the first half of January, when the ETFs debuted, but then collapsed back to bear-market levels,
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