Nearly Half of Crypto Owners First Bought Digital Assets in 2021: Survey

Nearly Half of Crypto Owners First Bought Digital Assets in 2021: Survey
A bank of cryptocurrency miners operates at the Scrubgrass Plant in Kennerdale, Penn., on March 8, 2022. Alan Freed/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

Almost half of all cryptocurrency owners in the United States, Latin America, and Asia Pacific purchased the digital assets for the first time in 2021, according to a new survey from U.S. cryptocurrency exchange Gemini.

The survey of nearly 30,000 people across 20 countries, which was conducted between November 2021 and February 2022, shows 2021 was a blockbuster year for crypto, with inflation in particular driving adoption in countries that have experienced currency devaluation, the report found.

Brazil and Indonesia lead the world in crypto adoption, Gemini found, with 41 percent of people surveyed in those countries reporting crypto ownership, compared with 20 percent in the United States and 18 percent in the United Kingdom.

Gemini found that 79 percent of people who reported owning crypto last year said they chose to purchase the digital assets for their long-term investment potential.

People who do not currently own crypto and live in countries that have experienced currency devaluation against the U.S. dollar were more than five times as likely to say they planned to purchase crypto as a hedge against inflation.

Only 16 percent of respondents in the United States and 15 percent in Europe agreed that cryptocurrencies hedge against inflation, compared with 64% in Indonesia and India, for example.

The Indian rupee has declined 17.5 percent against the dollar in the last five years, while the Indonesian rupiah depreciated 50 percent against the dollar between 2011 and 2020.

Only 17 percent of Europeans reported that they owned digital assets in 2021, and only 7 percent of those who do not currently own crypto said they intended to buy digital assets at some point.

It remains to be seen if the adoption momentum can keep pace this year.

While the most popular cryptocurrency, bitcoin, hit an all-time high of more than $68,000 in November, helping to push the value of the cryptocurrency market to $3 trillion, according to CoinGecko, it has traded in the narrow range of $34,000-$44,000 for most of 2022 so far.

By Hannah Lang