What you need to know today
SEC approves
A highly anticipated and controversial decision finally arrived Wednesday, with the Securities and Exchange Commission allowing the creation of bitcoin exchange-traded funds in the U.S. that will give regular investors access to the world’s oldest and most popular cryptocurrency. The first funds are set to start trading on Thursday. The price of bitcoin, however, shed about 2%.
Wall Street ends higher.
U.S. stocks ended Wednesday’s trading session higher as investors awaited the start of earnings season later in the week, as well as inflation data. Jump in shares of Intuitive Surgical and Lennar boosted markets. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 index breached the 35,000 mark for the first time since February 1990.
China woos investors
China has now vowed to make foreign investments easier, as was reported by state media. Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng met with global financial executives Wednesday when China’s tensions with the U.S. and worries about its economic growth have kept investors wary of putting money into the country.
Inflation report awaited
December inflation data, released on Thursday, could challenge the market’s perception of how soon the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates and by how much. Consumer prices would’ve likely edged higher last month, with expectations by Dow Jones pointing to a 0.2% rise in the final month of 2023 and a 3.2% increase for the entire year.
[PRO] Tesla versus BYD
Tesla has been an investor favorite, but a sizable Chinese rival in BYD could give Wall Street’s EV darling a run for its money. The Pros will dissect whether investors should stick with Tesla or buy into the up-and-coming BYD.
The bottom line
Bitcoin just received its approval, giving crypto bros their most powerful bragging rights yet.
The decision by the SEC to approve the creation and trading of bitcoin ETFs will allow for better adoption of the world’s oldest cryptocurrency by mainstream finance.
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, which holds about $29 billion of the cryptocurrency, will likely be converted into an ETF following the decision. At the same time, giant Wall Street’s BlackRock and Fidelity will also enter the playing field.
“Today’s news is possibly Bitcoin’s biggest since its launch, but the approval of spot ETFs shouldn’t be viewed in isolation, given the timing of the upcoming halving in April, which cuts the BTC supply and historically kickstarts the new bull market. Both these events could well send Bitcoin to $100,000 in 2024,” said Antoni Trenchev, co-founder and managing partner of the digital asset firm Nexo.
Trenchev also noted that “there is a temptation to say the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs is a buy-the-rumor, sell-the-news event.”
The decision came a day after an official SEC social media account falsely said bitcoin ETF trading had been approved, and the SEC confirmed that the account had been compromised.
U.S. stocks also eked out gains Wednesday, with the S&P 500 closing 0.57% higher, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.45%. The Nasdaq Composite gained 0.75%.
Later in the day, investors will also shift focus towards consumer price data, which is expected to show inflation increased in the last month of 2023.
This could potentially question whether markets are getting ahead of themselves in anticipating Fed-rate cuts. There remains a wide gap between what the U.S. central bank has indicated in loosening its monetary policy and what the market is expecting.