CFA Institute, the global association of investment professionals, has released a new cryptoassets valuation guide.
Developed by the CFA Institute Research and Policy Center, the guide seeks to equip investment professionals with the most relevant valuation models and tools to support analysis of cryptoassets, in connection with smart contract platforms, decentralized applications, and bitcoin.
The guide contributes toward the development, over time, of a framework for valuing cryptoassets. The issue of valuation has become a critical topic given the growth in cryptoassets over the past decade, currently estimated to exceed $1 trillion in market capitalization.1 At the same time, the cryptoassets market has undergone significant upheaval and price volatility, making an analysis of valuation drivers imperative for any investor or investment professional investing, or considering an investment in cryptoassets.
The valuation models in the guide include fundamental valuation approaches such as discounted cash flow analysis and relative valuation approaches adapted from traditional finance, where appropriate, as well as newer models specific to cryptoassets.
The models have been informed by interviews with industry professionals and a review of current literature. Given the plethora of valuation approaches available, many of which lack testing or rigor, only those models currently in use or considered relevant among practitioners are included in the guide.
The primary objective of CFA Institute is to ensure that investment professionals and the wider industry are informed of current valuation methods and the discourse over their advantages and disadvantages. The publication serves as part of a proactive undertaking toward a larger debate on the value proposition of cryptoassets.
Antoine Shehadeh, CFA, Senior Director, MENA, comments:
“In navigating the diverse crypto landscape, this guide serves as a crucial resource for investment professionals across the region. By delving into various valuation models, including those specific to smart contract platforms, decentralized applications, and bitcoin, we aim to foster a nuanced understanding. As the UAE positions itself as a blockchain pioneer, this guide not only contributes to a global conversation on cryptoassets but also holds significance in shaping the region’s role and impact in the evolving landscape of digital assets.”
- Valuation of smart contract platforms, such as Ethereum, can be approached from two viewpoints: the platform is considered either as a network, or as a cash-flow asset.
- As a network, a qualitative framework based on on-chain data can be used to assess these platforms on a relative valuation basis. Additionally, Metcalfe’s law, which values a network based on the square of its number of users, can be used to value the network relative to its market capitalization.
- As cash-flow assets, the valuation involves using the discounted cash flow (DCF) model. The DCF model considers the transaction fees collected by these platforms as cash flows.
- Valuation of decentralized applications – such as decentralized exchanges – can be performed using either a relative valuation approach or an intrinsic value approach using the DCF model.
- Such metrics as the price-to-sales, price-to-fees, and market capitalization to net assets ratios can be used to value – on a relative basis — decentralized applications within the same sector or to compare them with their traditional finance counterparts.
- The DCF model considers protocol revenue collected by a decentralized application as a cash flow, enabling the calculation of intrinsic value based on growth and discount rate assumptions.
- There is no one valuation model that encompasses all the characteristics of bitcoin. The guide includes four models for valuing bitcoin: total addressable market, stock-to-flow, Metcalfe’s law, and the cost of production model. Each model is derived from underlying characteristics and take differing viewpoints regarding whether bitcoin represents a store-of-value or medium-of-exchange. Basing each model on just one of bitcoin’s fundamentals leads to limitations.
With the publication of this guide, CFA Institute Research and Policy Center does not endorse a particular view of cryptoassets but rather seeks to inform the valuation debate. The findings and approaches encompassed in the guide do not constitute an endorsement, validation, or denial of cryptoassets.
About the CFA Institute Research and Policy Center:
The CFA Institute Research and Policy Center is a positive-influencing force in the global investment industry, transforming research insights into actions that strengthen markets, advance ethics, and improve investor outcomes for the ultimate benefit of society. It brings together CFA Institute expertise along with a diverse, cross-disciplinary community of subject matter experts working collaboratively to address complex problems. It is informed by the perspective of practitioners and the convening power, impartiality, and credibility of CFA Institute, whose mission is to lead the investment profession globally.
About CFA Institute:
CFA Institute is the global association of investment professionals that sets the standard for professional excellence and credentials. The organization is a champion of ethical behavior in investment markets and a respected source of knowledge in the global financial community. Our aim is to create an environment where investors’ interests come first, markets function at their best, and economies grow. There are nearly 200,000 CFA charterholders worldwide in 160 markets. CFA Institute has ten offices worldwide and 160 local societies.
