April 21 (Reuters) - Bitcoin's volatility is its main attraction and not a bug, as that is what gives the cryptocurrency its exponential rises, ex-Goldman Sachs bitcoin enthusiast Raoul Pal said.
"People have to learn to adapt to an asset that is that volatile... it has such a big upside risk-reward skew," Pal, founder and CEO of Real Vision, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum on Wednesday.
The Cayman Islands-based former hedge fund manager said he had a diversified crypto assets portfolio to cover exchanges, decentralised finance (DeFi) and community tokens.
"I'm probably right now 50% bitcoin, 30% ethereum and 20% alternative tokens... to try to keep a balance across the whole space, because I don't really know what's going to win in that space and what's not."
Bitcoin was trading 2.0% lower at $55,424 on the Bitstamp exchange, and ethereum was down 1.6% at $2,297.
Pal said he had a small exposure to meme-based cryptocurrency Dogecoin as well, to be "involved in the fun of it".
"It becomes the in-joke that becomes a network in itself. Will it last forever? Who the hell knows? But I bought some because the crowd is behind that," Pal added.
An 8,000% price increase this year has seen Dogecoin, launched as a satirical critique of 2013's cryptocurrency frenzy, overtake more widely used cryptocurrencies like Litecoin, and briefly Tether, to become the sixth-largest coin. It was trading at $0.3272 on the CoinMarketCap exchange.
Pal said increased regulation and uncertainty could push bitcoin lower.
"I think there's a negative narrative that may happen, where we see more risk come back into the markets," Pal said.
However, the markets were more worried about the uncertainty than regulation itself, Pal said, which he expected to benefit bitcoin over the longer term.
"I don't think anybody's going to stop this space," he said, adding that governments will eventually arrive at a balance to ensure taxation of crypto assets.
Pal expected the European Central Bank and the U.S. Federal Reserve to launch their digital currencies in the next three-to-five years, and India to move "quickly" in this space too.
India already had "pretty advanced" digital payment mechanisms, he said. "I think India will figure this out eventually."
A senior government official told Reuters in March that India was expected to propose a law banning cryptocurrencies, fining anyone trading or even holding such assets in the country.
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