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Bitcoin Blips Past $6,300 In Jaw-Dropping Move: What’s Next?

Bitcoin blips past $6,300 in jaw-dropping move: what’s next?

Bitcoin Blips Past $6,300 In Jaw-Dropping Move: What’s Next?

Bitcoin blips past $6,300 in jaw-dropping move: what’s next?

A U.S. Congressman may have just called for the ban of cryptocurrencies, but Bitcoin (BTC) hasn’t cared one teeny-tiny bit. In the past 24 hours, BTC has rallied by 3%, perpetuating a rally that has been going on for over a month now.

While some cynics have argued that bitcoin is rallying too fast and too high for its own good, some are sure that BTC’s technical set-up still is looking entirely bullish.

bitcoin Ticks Past $6,300 In 2019 First

David Puell of Adaptive Capital, who last week postulated that BTC was trading in a clearly bullish broadening ascending wedge, explains that the cryptocurrency is literally going short-term parabolic. In fact, Puell defines bitcoin’s recent price action as “vertical,” accentuating that bulls are truly in control.

He adds that with the number of short positions on both Bitfinex and BitMEX continuing to rally to new year-to-date highs, the potential for a short squeeze has boomed. Puell notes that if BTC hits $6,400, as his parabolic model foresees, “a perfect blow-off top” could form, whereas shorts are squeezed, and BTC rallies in a 2017-esque fashion.

Others would agree. Financial Survivalism, who once revealed a model that saw BTC falling to $800 in the current cycle, explains that bitcoin’s 10-minute chart is currently shaping up to be a short-term Hyperwave. As this form of technical analysis predicts, BTC could see a vertical rally to the high $6,000s, and then may see a near-vertical drop back to the $5,000s.

Not only is bitcoin looking hot in the short-term, but in the long-term too. As Fundstrat head of research, Tom Lee points out, bitcoin has ostensibly rallied in the face of negative macroeconomic and political trends, cementing the idea that BTC is uncorrelated and likely in a “bull market.”

Lee explains that in a period during which political tensions are mounting, global equities may be trending lower, the VIX (volatility) index has seen a massive spike, and global yield curves are implying an impending recession, BTC has rallied, and moved above the ever-important $6,000 level. Nice.

Altseason Is No More

Although bitcoin-centric cryptocurrency investors have been absolutely enamored with BTC’s recent uptick, altcoin holders likely aren’t all too pleased. Per data from Messari’s OnChainFX, dominance for the lead cryptocurrency has breached a jaw-dropping 62%, the highest this key statistic has read in months.

This is to be expected, especially considering that the industry’s startups and investors currently are rather focused on BTC, yet many have been caught aback by this move. Just over two weeks ago, Fundstrat’s resident bitcoin bull opined that if history rhymes, altseason, which he defined as a period during which a large percentage of altcoins in the “liquid universe” rally by over 200% in a short period of time, could be just around the corner.

Per Lee’s explanation, which cites data from Bloomberg, CoinMarketCap, and his own firm, a drop in the rolling 90-day correlation between the two subsets has preceded three altseasons — March 2016, early-2017, and late-2017/early-2018. With this statistic then falling, the commentator then explained that an altseason, which could see cryptocurrencies rallied ten-fold was on the horizon.

Altseason, as we now know, did not turn out how Fundstrat expected it. So, if altseason is no more, what’s next for non-bitcoin digital assets?

Related Reading: Altcoin Trader: Alt Market Cap Shows Longest Accumulation Phase Yet

Per a number of analysts, Ethereum, XRP, and its brethren are about to be slammed even further, for their BTC pairs anyway. Survivalism explains that bitcoin dominance just broke out of a bull flag. If textbook technical trends are followed, as Survivalism expects, dominance for the lead cryptocurrency could hit 77% in the coming months. Wow.

It is important to note that this prediction isn’t baseless. Chris Burniske, a partner at Placeholder that produces amazing threads on cryptoeconomics, explains that movements in dominance can be confined to a simple cycle.

Burniske explains that when bitcoin rallies, a “majority of ‘alts’ drop,” specifically due to the fact that BTC has and continues to act as the primary liquidity provider for cryptocurrency. This didn’t occur in 2017’s rally, but in the short-term, it appears that this theme materializes time and time again. Thus, the question remains — if bitcoin continues to rally, could we really see a market where 77% of its capitalization is BTC?

Featured Image from Shutterstock

Published at Fri, 10 May 2019 14:30:11 +0000

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North Korea Behind Recent YouBit Hack?

Cybercrime experts are attributing the most recent bitcoin heist to North Korea. The Wall Street Journal report that the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange YouBit is the latest victim of a malicious hacking, and that their northern neighbours are to blame. YouBit have been forced to declare themselves bankrupt after 17 percent of their digital assets were stolen. They are allowing customers to immediately withdraw three quarters of the funds in their accounts. The remaining sums will be paid out following the liquidation of the exchange.

The allegations come just one day after the US laid the blame for the WannaCry cryptographic worm attack on North Korea. ARS Technica report that White House National Security Adviser Tom Bossert stated yesterday:

“We do not make this allegation lightly. It is based on evidence. We are not alone with our findings, either. Other governments and private companies agree. The United Kingdom attributes the attack to North Korea, and Microsoft traced the attack to cyber affiliates of the North Korean government.”

The WannaCry ransomware attack targeted users of the Windows operating system this Spring. It’s estimated to have infected over 300,000 computers across the globe. Computers and their contents were frozen and a demand of bitcoin was then made to those affected.

These examples are not the first time that the communist dictatorship of North Korea have been implicated in such heists. Just this year, three additional attacks have been made against South Korean exchanges that are being blamed on operatives working under Kim Jong Un. The largest of which was on Yapizon, YouBit’s predecessor. They were compromised back in April. This digital heist saw even larger sums of cryptocurrency lifted.

A report issued back in September by cyber security firm FireEye acknowledged the motive behind North Korea’s interest in digital currency. The fact that cryptocurrencies offer permission-less movement of funds across the planet makes them ideal for the purpose of laundering money and evading sanctions. Hackers can then use coin tumbling services to “clean” funds. Alternatively, they can exchange bitcoin involved in a hack for a much less traceable currency like the anonymity coin Monero. It’s believed that this is what occurred following the WannaCry outbreak.

For a country trying to fight off aggressive international sanctions and continue their militarisation, cryptocurrency seems to present an obvious solution to traditional financial channels being closed off to them. ARS Technica estimate that some $16 billion have been lifted by North Korea to finance their foreign policy objectives. Whilst this is pittance when compared with the over $612 billion market cap of all of cryptocurrency, for a nation that are currently in the midst of economic strangulation, it’s certainly worth going after.

 

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