Why Real Assets Still Matter When Speculative Wealth Shakes
For property investors, the most useful lesson from the latest Bitcoin drawdown is not about crypto itself. It is about how quickly perceived wealth can change when an asset has no income, no tenant demand, and no practical yield beneath the price.
According to Decrypt, billionaire investor Jeremy Grantham, co-founder of GMO, described crypto as a “useless, speculative mechanism” during an appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” His criticism focused less on technology and more on function. Bitcoin, he argued, has not behaved like a reliable store of value, particularly after falling more than 50% from its reported all-time high of $126,080 despite broadly supportive economic conditions.
That matters beyond digital assets. Investors have spent the past decade comparing Bitcoin, gold, equities, and real estate as inflation hedges and stores of wealth. The current signal is clear: not all stores of value are built on the same foundation. Some depend almost entirely on sentiment and liquidity. Others are supported by utility, scarcity, income, and replacement cost.
Real estate is not risk-free. Pricing can correct, financing costs can compress returns, and weak locations can underperform for years. But a well-bought property has attributes that speculative assets do not. It can house a tenant, produce rent, secure debt, benefit from planning constraints, and respond to local supply-demand pressure. Those fundamentals do not eliminate volatility, but they give investors something to underwrite.
The strongest stores of value are not defined by price momentum. They are defined by utility, income, scarcity, and demand that survives a market mood swing.
Grantham’s comments also highlight a practical issue for property buyers who have built part of their deposit base or net worth in crypto. A 17% monthly decline, as Decrypt reported for Bitcoin, can materially change purchasing power. For a buyer planning a £500,000 acquisition with a 25% deposit, a sharp fall in liquid assets can mean a smaller deposit, weaker lender confidence, or delayed execution. In competitive property markets, that timing risk has a real cost.
Lenders and professional counterparties already tend to treat volatile assets cautiously. Crypto holdings may support a personal balance sheet, but they rarely carry the same underwriting weight as cash, contracted rental income, diversified securities, or existing property equity. For developers, landlords, and high-net-worth buyers, this distinction matters when arranging facilities, bridging loans, or refinancing portfolios.
There is still a financial technology point worth separating from the speculation. Grantham reportedly conceded that blockchain rails could have transformative use. In real estate, that could eventually affect title verification, transaction settlement, tokenised ownership structures, and cross-border capital flows. The investment case for infrastructure is different from the investment case for a volatile coin. Serious investors should not confuse the two.
The takeaway is not that every pound should move into property. It is that capital allocation should be judged by resilience. Income-producing real estate, bought at the right basis and financed sensibly, remains one of the few asset classes where investors can connect price to use, cash flow, and long-term human demand. When speculative wealth shakes, that connection becomes more valuable, not less.
Source: Decrypt


