Contents and objectives

In recent years, and particularly since the approval of spot ETFs in the United States, Bitcoin has seen a gradual evolution in its perception by institutional investors, moving from a predominantly speculative asset characterized by significant volatility to a protective instrument and a genuine strategic asset for companies and sovereign states

    1. Analysis of the context and market cyclicality: halving, historical trends, and macroeconomic correlations

    2. Investment approaches: HODL vs active trading, accumulation plans (DCA), hedging strategies

    3. Risk management and diversication: volatility, correlations with other assets, derivatives

    1. Overview of custody solutions: self-custody, regulated custody, cold storage

    2. Security risks and threats: cyber attacks, human error, legal and regulatory risks

    3. Role of institutional intermediaries: compliance standards, insurance, and fiduciary responsibility

    1. Regulatory framework and compliance requirements: licenses, regulations, international guidelines

    2. Product structuring: ETFs, ETPs, funds, derivatives, and innovative solutions

    3. Operational challenges and opportunities: liquidity, scalability, investor education

    1. DeFi integration on Bitcoin: layer 2 protocols (e.g., Lightning, RSK, Stacks)

    2. Main use cases: lending, borrowing, tokenization, and stablecoins pegged to Bitcoin

    3. Risks and future prospects: protocol security, governance, impact on mainstream adoption

About this course

  • 12 lessons
  • 0 hours of video content