Bitcoin's gender divide could be a bad sign, experts say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 11:20 PM | Calgary | -0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
BusinessAnalysis

Bitcoin's gender divide could be a bad sign, experts say

Bitcoin, and the world of cryptocurrency, is a boys' club, say some experts, and that should be cause for concern.

Women will get more involved in the cryptocurrency world when and if it becomes less risky

The cryptocurrency landscape is predominantly male. Some experts say that if women are staying away, it's probably too risky. (John Fraser/CBC)

Bitcoin, and the world of cryptocurrency, is a boys' club, say some experts,and that should be cause forconcern.

Cryptocurrencyis a form of digital currency traded between people or used to purchase goods outside of banks or government regulation that's part of what makes it risky. Figuring outexactly whois putting money into this kind of asset is difficult because part of the attraction of investing in the crypto realm is the assurance of anonymity.

But survey after surveybacks up what the anecdotal evidence suggests women are underrepresented.

Google Analytics results put the divide at 96.57 per cent men to 3.43 per cent women.

That's a huge red flagto Duncan Stewart,research director of Deloitte Canada's technology division.

"It isn't merely that the value has risen as far and as fast as it has; it's the fact that it's 97 per cent men that is, in and of itself, a potential danger sign," he says.

"There are studies out there that suggest men are predisposed towards bubbles in a way that women are not."

Stewart madehis case in arecent onlinepostabout the subject.Stewart said he "cannot thinkof any security, currency or asset class in history that shows that extreme a gender divide and has been sustainable."

Men make up the overwhelming majority of the bitcoin community, according to various anecdotal sources like this Google analytics pie chart.

One reason is the well-documentedlower risk tolerance of female investors. In other words, if women aren't getting involved, it's likely too risky, this line of thinking suggests.

The most comprehensive study on gender and the stock market shows that women who invest whether their own money oron behalf of an organization take a more cautious approach buttend to outperform their male peers in the long run.

'Role models are needed'

Stewart says he saw this in action during the dot-comboom and bust in the early 2000s.

Back then, he was an award-winning technology fund manager onBay Street. Female fundmanagers represented about 20 per cent of institutional investors at the time, but they shied away from the tech stocks the men were heavily invested in.

He recalls his female colleagues being mocked for not jumping in with as much fervour as the men until the men began losing lots of money.

"Maybe they 'got' it better than the men did all along," Stewart said.

Iliana Oris Valiente, co-founder of the blockchain initiative Rubix, says when she entered the world of cryptocurrencies, 'I was regularly the only female in the room, period.' (Accenture)

Iliana Oris Valiente is a rarity in the cryptocurrency world. She has emerged as a female leader in this spaceand was recently chosen to lead consulting firm Accenture's global blockchaininnovation division (blockchain is the technology behind cryptocurrencies).

A chartered accountant by training,she began her career in the world of auditing but got hooked on bitcoin as soon as she heard of it in 2012.

Oris Valiente says when she entered the world of cryptocurrenciesit wasa noticeably male-dominated industry.

"In 2014, when this started to become a core component of my day job, I was regularly the only female in the room, period," she said.

She says things are changing, albeit slowly. "We're starting to see really strong females in leadership roles," she said.

For instance, of the largest initial coin offerings(or ICOs, which are fundraising mechanisms for blockchain-related projects) currently underway, about 13 per cent are headed by women.

"They're acting as very powerful role models, and these role models are needed to encourage other women to potentially look at this field," said OrisValiente.

Glaring gender divide

Oris Valiente doesn't buy into the theory that an outsized amount of male interest in a particular asset in and of itself creates a bubble.

"If we have primarily men involved in building the businesses and being the early-stage investors, they're likely to share the new tidbits and the new deals with their own established networks."

But without a major catalyst, she doesn't see the gender divide in this field narrowing anytime soon.

So OrisValienteis spreading the word herself, reaching out to hundreds of women through speaking engagements, trying to convince them that this is a field where they're needed.

"I'msharing my personal journey into this ecosystem, explaining the basics of the cryptocurrency ecosystem, outlining what the different opportunities are ... as this ecosystem continues to grow."

She'sconvinced this technology is here to stay.

Signs of a bubble

The debate continues over whether the surge in interest and investment in cryptocurrencies is really a bubble.

Stewartpoints out that savvy people can make money during a bubble. "As long as you are one of those incredibly clever people who buys when it's low and sells on the way up."

But if cryptocurrenciesare here to stay, Stewart says the gender divide will sort itself out over time. "Either it is a bubble, or it does turn out to be a real important currency that people use for the purchase of legal goods and services and as a store of value," he said.

"If that happens, women will show up to the party. Late, in this case, but they will show up."