Billionaire trader Paul Tudor Jones made bank in gold. Now he calls Bitcoin the ‘best inflation hedge’Paul Tudor Jones is heaping praise on Bitcoin.
In a Wednesday appearance of the Invest Like The Best podcast, the billionaire hedge fund manager, who was one of several traders to capitalise on Bitcoin’s near 900% rise in 2020, lauded the top cryptocurrency for its ability to counter inflation.
“Bitcoin is, unequivocally, the best inflation hedge that there is,” he said. “There’s only so much Bitcoin that can be mined.”
Jones' commentary provides a candid glimpse into the financial trader’s thoughts on the top cryptocurrency, and more broadly attitudes among institutional investors.
He’s by far from the only finance heavyweight to endorse Bitcoin.
Blackrock CEO Larry Fink has on multiple occasions advocated for Bitcoin and praised its unique value. He’s previously called it “digital gold” and recommended institutions allocate around 5% to it.
Analysts at several other Wall Street firms, including JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and Fidelity, have also recognised Bitcoin’s value as an inflation hedge, although some argue its effectiveness in this regard can be context-specific, and not guaranteed in all environments.
Better than gold?
Jones, now 71, got his start trading commodities in the 1970s.
At age 26, he founded the Tudor Investment Corporation, which focused on making large bets on currencies, interest rates, commodities, and stock indices based on macroeconomic trends. The fund was a roaring success, and returned over 100% annually in its first five years operating.
Drawing from this background, Jones sees Bitcoin’s main competitor as gold, which is widely viewed as a hedge against the inflation of national currencies.
He argues that Bitcoin is better as an inflation hedge because its supply is capped at 21 million. The supply of gold, on the other hand, keeps on growing.
“In terms of it being a great inflation hedge, gold is increasing in supply every year by about a couple of percent,” he said. “Bitcoin — there’s a finite amount that can be mined, it’s decentralised, so in that sense, it has the greatest scarcity value of anything.”
Bitcoin risks
While a Bitcoin fan, Jones is not unaware of the asset’s downsides.
“The problem with it as an inflation hedge is that if you got into a kinetic exchange, there’s clearly going to be cyber warfare. Anything that you have to deal with electronically is going down, including Bitcoin,” he said.
Then there’s the mounting threat of quantum computers, which could theoretically break the encryption that underpins not just Bitcoin, but large swathes of the world’s digital infrastructure.
“Who knows if and when, with AI advancing as fast as it is, that we may actually have quantum computing,” Jones said. “Someone can come in and hack any bank, can hack anything they want to.”
A June report from consulting firm McKinsey & Company predicts that based on the current rate of development, a quantum computer with the ability to threaten Bitcoin could be developed as early as next year.
Tim Craig is DL News’ Edinburgh-based DeFi Correspondent. Reach out with tips at tim@dlnews.com.
read the full story
Paul Tudor Jones is heaping praise on Bitcoin.
In a Wednesday appearance of the Invest Like The Best podcast, the billionaire hedge fund manager, who was one of several traders to capitalise on Bitcoin’s near 900% rise in 2020, lauded the top cryptocurrency for its ability to counter inflation.
“Bitcoin is, unequivocally, the best inflation hedge that there is,” he said. “There’s only so much Bitcoin that can be mined.”
Jones' commentary provides a candid glimpse into the financial trader’s thoughts on the top cryptocurrency, and more broadly attitudes among institutional investors.
He’s by far from the only finance heavyweight to endorse Bitcoin.
Blackrock CEO Larry Fink has on multiple occasions advocated for Bitcoin and praised its unique value. He’s previously called it “digital gold” and recommended institutions allocate around 5% to it.
Analysts at several other Wall Street firms, including JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and Fidelity, have also recognised Bitcoin’s value as an inflation hedge, although some argue its effectiveness in this regard can be context-specific, and not guaranteed in all environments.
Better than gold?
Jones, now 71, got his start trading commodities in the 1970s.
At age 26, he founded the Tudor Investment Corporation, which focused on making large bets on currencies, interest rates, commodities, and stock indices based on macroeconomic trends. The fund was a roaring success, and returned over 100% annually in its first five years operating.
Drawing from this background, Jones sees Bitcoin’s main competitor as gold, which is widely viewed as a hedge against the inflation of national currencies.
He argues that Bitcoin is better as an inflation hedge because its supply is capped at 21 million. The supply of gold, on the other hand, keeps on growing.
“In terms of it being a great inflation hedge, gold is increasing in supply every year by about a couple of percent,” he said. “Bitcoin — there’s a finite amount that can be mined, it’s decentralised, so in that sense, it has the greatest scarcity value of anything.”
Bitcoin risks
While a Bitcoin fan, Jones is not unaware of the asset’s downsides.
“The problem with it as an inflation hedge is that if you got into a kinetic exchange, there’s clearly going to be cyber warfare. Anything that you have to deal with electronically is going down, including Bitcoin,” he said.
Then there’s the mounting threat of quantum computers, which could theoretically break the encryption that underpins not just Bitcoin, but large swathes of the world’s digital infrastructure.
“Who knows if and when, with AI advancing as fast as it is, that we may actually have quantum computing,” Jones said. “Someone can come in and hack any bank, can hack anything they want to.”
A June report from consulting firm McKinsey & Company predicts that based on the current rate of development, a quantum computer with the ability to threaten Bitcoin could be developed as early as next year.
Tim Craig is DL News’ Edinburgh-based DeFi Correspondent. Reach out with tips at tim@dlnews.com.
read the full storyJustin Sun: Why Crypto Cards Are the ‘Next Evolution’ for Stablecoin Distribution
Tron founder Justin Sun has declared that crypto cards are the next structural phase in how digital…
Bitcoin is repeating a 2022 pattern – and this time we’re missing the buyers for what came next
CryptoQuant's latest Apr. 30 read shows that perpetual futures are driving Bitcoin's recovery, while…
Bitcoin Closes April Up 12% as Strategy's MSTR Posts First Positive Month Since July
Bitcoin rallied 12% in April as Strategy added $4.1 billion in BTC, but on-chain data suggests gains…
Analysis: Bitcoin’s 46-day funding drain set the stage for this week’s wipeout
Bitcoin funding rates stayed negative for 46 days, the longest since 2023, forcing shorts to pay…
Bitcoin Miner Riot Platforms Offloads Another 500 BTC to NYDIG, Extending Sell Streak
Bitcoin miner Riot Platforms has deposited another 500 BTC, worth $38.24 million, to institutional…
Bitcoin Ended April With Biggest Monthly Gains in a Year: What’s Next?
Ethereum also ended April in the green, reinforcing the gains from March.
Bitcoin ticks higher, but remains range-bound as traders keep short bias
BTC rises to $77,000 after holding $75,000 support, but negative funding, unchanged open interest…
Bitcoin Price Prediction: BTC is Pentagon “National Security Asset”
Hegseth Bitcoin National Security Shift: Portfolio Impact
The post appeared first on .
Hegseth recasts Bitcoin as national security asset amid Russia, China expansion
Bitcoin just got a war upgrade.On Thursday, US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth told Congress that…
Bitcoin Spot CVD Surges 199% as Institutional Inflows Re-Accelerate
Bitcoin Spot CVD exploded 199.1% over the prior week, climbing from $18.3 million to $54.8 million,…
BTC Miner Riot Platforms Dumps Another 500 to NYDIG, Keeps 2026 Sell Streak Alive
Riot Platforms just moved 500 Bitcoin to NYDIG. The sale brought in $38.24 million and marks another…
Riot Q1 results show Bitcoin pressure and AI data center growth
Riot reports $167.2M Q1 revenue, sells 3,778 BTC, and expands AMD data center capacity to 50 MW.
Bitcoin edges above $77,000, but institutional activity suggests downside hedging
BTC rises on steady volume and strong technical structure, but surging put interest and muted…
US Debt Nears $39T GDP Mark for First Time Since 1946, Validating Bitcoin
The U.S. national debt has officially surpassed $38.9 trillion, eclipsing 100% of the country’s…
Bitcoin Structure Mirrors 2022 Bottom – But There’s a Big Catch
Actually, there might be more than one signal suggesting BTC could be heading for another correction…
Bitcoin seals best monthly gain in a year as S&P 500 hits fresh all-time high
Bitcoin finished April above $76,000 to preserve most of its monthly gains, but the S&P 500…
Bitcoin community launches Bitcoin Beyond 66 AI tool to counter energy concerns
A Nordic Bitcoin education group has released an open-source AI database designed to generate…
Anthropic’s new Mythos AI will hit crypto. Bitcoin investors don’t care, says Coinbase
Artificial intelligence is a Sword of Damocles dangling over crypto — but Wall Street isn’t…