PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - J. Benson Durham TI - Cryptocurrency Risks AID - 10.3905/joi.2020.1.128 DP - 2020 May 31 TA - The Journal of Investing PG - 43--66 VI - 29 IP - 4 4099 - https://pm-research.com/content/29/4/43.short 4100 - https://pm-research.com/content/29/4/43.full AB - Optimizations given historical data unsurprisingly produce sizeable allocations to Bitcoin (XBT). But further analyses of risks raise questions, even abstracting from expected returns. GARCH-based measures of dynamic XBT volatility and covariance suggest that optimal weights change over time. Also, quantile regressions indicate that conditional XBT returns with respect to the S&P 500 are modestly positively skewed. Yet benevolent symmetry is hardly stable or consistent along the distribution. Spectral analysis shows that the XBT volatility primarily owes to higher-frequency cycles. Nonetheless, XBT betas are substantially greater, and notably positive, over longer cycles compared with shorter cycles, which implies that XBT has been a much less effective strategic hedge. Dynamic principal components analysis indicates that individual coins’ exposures to the “crypto market factor” have likely increased meaningfully enough over time to diminish diversification benefits.TOPICS: Currency, portfolio construction, portfolio theoryKey Findings• Standard mean-variance portfolio optimizations given historical data unsurprisingly produce sizeable allocations to Bitcoin (XBT). But further analyses of risks raise questions, especially for passive investors and abstracting from expected returns. For example, GARCH-based measures of dynamic XBT volatility and covariance suggest that optimal portfolio weights change substantially over time.• Quantile regressions indicate that conditional XBT returns with respect to the S&P 500 are modestly positively skewed, arguably unlike even safe-haven assets such as US Treasuries. However, this comparatively benevolent symmetry is hardly stable or consistent along the distribution.• Spectral analysis shows that the XBT volatility primarily owes to higher-frequency cycles, much like common asset classes. Nonetheless, XBT betas are substantially greater, and notably positive, over longer cycles compared with shorter cycles, which implies that XBT has been a much less effective strategic hedge. Also, dynamic principal components analysis indicates that individual coins’ exposures to the “crypto market factor” have likely increased meaningfully enough over time to diminish diversification benefits for passive investors.