2021 was a historic year for crypto with many milestones. And there are no signs of the momentum slowing down in 2022!
As per our tradition since 2015, here are my 10 crypto predictions for the coming year:
2021 saw the concept of the metaverse burst into the mainstream. Whilst many Metaverse games and ecosystems have been around for many years, from Second Life to Roblox, Facebook changing its name to Meta in late October 2021 brought this to the forefront. This has put the spotlight on the growing metaverse ecosystem. The likes of Decentraland and The Sandbox are good examples, each of which has seen tremendous growth. Expect this to continue in 2022, with every Fortune 500 company trying to figure out their own metaverse strategy.
Twenty years ago, every business had to suddenly come up with their e-commerce or online strategy. Now, every Fortune 500 company will need to think about their metaverse strategy. Expect consulting firms (like ours) to be all over this.
2021 was the year the broader world “discovered” the metaverse. 2022 will be the year it may go mainstream.
Last year we predicted that 2021 would see many private banks enter the crypto space. And they did. 2021 saw many private banks, from Morgan Stanley to J.P. Morgan launch Bitcoin and crypto products for their customers.
Such products were a response to the demand for exposure to digital assets from many of the family offices and high net-worth individuals. In addition, these products still offer high fees and high margins for private banks in an environment in which fee compression is becoming the norm.
However, while having such products are now seen as a competitive advantage for these private banks, we will probably soon move to an era in which not having any crypto products will be a stark disadvantage.
Many large private banks disregarded Bitcoin as not a serious asset (not having crypto related products to sell probably did not help!). But we should expect most to do a 180 and launch crypto offerings in 2022.
2021 saw El Salvador become the first country in the world to recognize Bitcoin as legal tender. The positive effects are already being recorded: according to El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele, more people there now have a Bitcoin wallet than a bank account, allowing the 70% of the population that receives remittances to be able to do so without the excessive remittance fees, which can balloon up to 12.5%.
Not surprisingly, both the IMF and the World Bank, both organizations created during the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference in which the U.S. dollar was adopted as the global reserve currency, have been very opposed to such moves, publicly warning El Salvador to reverse course.
Many politicians or policy makers in other smaller countries, especially those that are dollarized or de facto dollarized like Panama, or those in the developing world like Paraguay, could follow El Salvador’s footsteps.
Others may not want Bitcoin per say, but could be interested in other forms of digital currencies. For example, Palau announced that it is looking at launching a government backed stablecoin, whil the Marshall Islands is already looking at launching its own digital currency. And this often goes beyond emerging markets. For example, with a recent survey finding that 27% of US residents support making Bitcoin legal tender.
Expect many other jurisdictions to monitor how things develop in El Salvador closely. They may not necessarily directly follow in their footsteps and recognize Bitcoin as legal tender in 2022, but expect this topic to be discussed very actively.
https://www.coindesk.com/layer2/2021/12/24/10-2022-predictions-from-pwcs-henri-arslanian/