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Analysts: Bitcoin Price (BTC) To Revisit $20,000 in March 2021

Analysts: bitcoin price (btc) to revisit $20,000 in march 2021

Analysts: Bitcoin Price (BTC) To Revisit $20,000 in March 2021

At the moment, the cryptocurrency market is primarily concerned about when Bitcoin might bottom, and not when Bitcoin price will return to its previous all-time high of $20,000. Market sentiment is currently so low, any positive movement in bitcoin price is normally rejected by bears hoping to buy the number one crypto later at lower prices.

However, according to a team of analysts from Canaccord Genuity Capital Markets, Bitcoin is bottoming now and will find its way back to its previous all-time high on or around March 2021 – over two years from now.

bitcoin Price: Slow and Steady Rise Back to Previous All-Time High

BTC is currently trading at around $3,700 today, following a fall from local highs of over $4,200. These numbers would have been laughable back in December 2017 when bitcoin was trading anywhere from $13,000 to a high if $20,000.

But after Bitcoin’s parabolic advance was broken and the media blitz and irrational exuberance subsided, the price of the leading crypto by market cap fell significantly and has since struggled to find a bottom or regain bullish momentum.

Related Reading | Fundamentals Grow While Bitcoin Price Stagnates, Where Does BTC Go From Here?

What’s next for BTC, according to a team of analysts from Canaccord Genuity Capital Markets, is a slow and steady rise toward the previous all-time high price of $20,000 – a price point the analysts expect to occur in March 2021. Michael Graham and Scott Suh of Canaccord Genuity Capital Markets used a repeating four-year cycle model to come up with their estimate.

“Looking ahead, if bitcoin were to continue following the same trend as in the years 2011-2017, the implication is that bitcoin would be bottoming approximately now and would soon begin climbing back towards its all-time high of ~$20,000, theoretically reaching that level in March 2021,” they explained.

Analysts: bitcoin price (btc) to revisit $20,000 in march 2021

Catalysts for BTC Bull Run: Halving, Lightning, Institutional Custody, and More

The analysts recognized a 4-year cyclical pattern occurring on bitcoin price charts, which appear to roughly coincide with each halving.

Each halving lowers the reward amount that miners receive after validating a block successfully. The current block reward is at 12.5 BTC per block, however, after the next “halving” each reward will be cut in half to just 6.25 BTC.

Related Reading | Poll Reveals Majority of Crypto Investors See Bitcoin Price at $100,000 to Millions Long-Term

With the supply of new BTC lowering, demand rises thus kicking off each new bull market. But that’s only if bitcoin follows the same pattern as the past. This time, the analysts suggest, could be different.

The analysts add that there are “several tangible catalysts that could propel the price of bitcoin in 2019.” Graham and Suh further reveal that second-layer applications aimed at scaling and the growth of “emerging market countries,” as well as the launch of institutional custody solutions such as Fidelity Digital Assets could help the number 1 crypto turn bullish sooner than later.

Images from Shutterstock

Published at Tue, 05 Mar 2019 01:01:10 +0000

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Adam Back: Blockstream ‘Has No Patents Related To SegWit’

Blockstream CEO Adam Back has refuted claims by Swedish Pirate Party founder Rick Falkvinge that the company “has patents in SegWit.”


 Pirate Party’s Falkvinge: Blockstream SegWit Support Driven By Patents

In a Twitter response Monday, Back stated Blockstream “does not have any patents, patent applications, provisional patent applications, or anything similar, related to segwit.”

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Falkvinge, who is a staunch supporter of bigger blocks proposed by rival scaling solution campaigners bitcoin Unlimited, had earlier Monday released a dedicated post on his website arguing Blockstream’s SegWit support was for its own interests.

“Based on Blockstream’s behavior in the bitcoin community, I have become absolutely certain that Segwit contains patents that Blockstream and/or their owners have planned to use offensively,” he wrote.

Falkvinge Accuses Blockstream Of ‘Goalpost Moving’

The post accuses Blockstream of “classic goalpost moving” and employing behavior that “only makes sense” under a patent battle.

Falkvinge continues:

…Based on Blockstream’s behavior, I can say with dead certainty that I’ve seen this exact behavior many times in the past, and it’s always when somebody has a dual set of reasons – one for presentation and palate and another that drives the actual course of action.

Back’s Twitter retort appears to be lifted from previous comments on Reddit left by core developer Greg Maxwell.Maxwell

“As is the case for other major protocol features, the bitcoin developers worked carefully to not create patent complications. Segwit was a large-scale collaboration across the community, which included people who work for Blockstream among its many contributors,” he continued.

Moreover, because the public disclosure of segwit was more than a year ago, we could not apply for patents now.

Maxwell reiterated that Falkvinge had previously made similar allegations, which he had addressed separately.

“In short, Rick Falkvinge’s allegations are entirely without merit and are supported by nothing more than pure speculation which had already been debunked,” he concluded.

A Clash Of Ideals?

Falkvinge meanwhile has remained bullish on bitcoin publicly, telling RT in February he expected bitcoin could take over up to 10% of the foreign exchange market.

In his post, however, a clear distinction is drawn between the classic bitcoin ethos and that of Blockstream.

The owners of Blockstream are the classic financial institutions […] that have everything to lose from cryptocurrency gaining ground,” he wrote.

The conclusion is unescapable (sic) here: Blockstream’s constant goalpost shifting has had the underlying goal to have Blockstream’s owners effectively own bitcoin through patent encumbrance.

What do you think about Rick Falkvinge’s claims about Blockstream? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Twitter

The post Adam Back: Blockstream ‘Has No Patents Related To SegWit’ appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.