Young Black Americans dominate the cryptocurrency market
byย NNPA Newswire Senior Correspondent Stacy M. Brown
When considering the current state of the cryptocurrency market, Dr. Tonya Evans couldnโt help but recall the reception banks gave the then-fledgling assets in 2014.
โWhen I think back to 2013 or 2014, the second kind of big crypto was coming on the scene, and banks were really pushing back at the time on discussions surrounding regulating cryptocurrency,โ said Evans, a law professor and founder and CEO of Advantage Evans.
โBig banks feared [cryptocurrency] would become more legitimate. Back then, banks didnโt have a customer service problem, but now they do, and they realized that they were going to start losing customers if they didnโt shift,โ Evans insisted.
She noted that banks, especially Deutsche Bank and Bank of America, have begun to give added attention to the cryptocurrency market.
โWith Bitcoin and Ethereum leading the way, the cryptocurrency market is booming and growing,โ Evans stated.
She called cryptocurrency a โfast-paced, fast-moving, emerging asset class.โ
According to Terri Bradford, who researchedย Black crypto ownershipย for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, cryptocurrency has gained popularity among African American consumers due to historical context and forward-looking views of young customers.
โSurveys show that Black consumers are more likely than white consumers to own cryptocurrencies,โ said Bradford, who penned the research article “The Cryptic Nature of Black Consumer Cryptocurrency Ownership.”
Bradford noted a 2021 Pew Research Center survey which found that 18 percent of Black adults had invested in, traded, or used a cryptocurrency compared to 13 percent of white adults.
โThis difference between Black and white consumersโ cryptocurrency ownership contrasts sharply with other traditional assets,โ Bradford asserted.
According to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Systemโs 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances, 61 percent of white households owned equity investments compared with 34 percent of Black households โ nearly a two-to-one margin.
โUnlike white consumers, Black consumers are, in fact, more likely to own cryptocurrencies than assets such as stocks and mutual funds,โ Bradford wrote.
โLeveraging the same technology is blockchain,โ Bradford explained. โCrypto is digital currency offered on Blockchain while NFTs and others are different ways to leverage that currency.โ
She continued: โYounger ones are leveraging crypto as we see in research that 50 percent of Black consumers of crypto are millennials and younger, and when you think about the fact that this constituent is digital-native where they spend a lot of time, then we see why itโs having a great influence on the adoption of cryptocurrency.โ
