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Bitcoin Price Dips Beneath Level from One Year Ago

Bitcoin price dips beneath level from one year ago

Bitcoin Price Dips Beneath Level from One Year Ago


Bitcoin price
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The bitcoin yearly candle has finally gone red, with the daily price average about 0.25% below the price from one year ago today. This is the culmination of a long slump in bitcoin price and trading volumes since the extreme highs of last year. While this article is not meant to analyze trading markets, we would like to mention some of the factors that go into this terrible present for Bitcoin’s tenth birthday.

Bitcoin price dips beneath level from one year ago

A year ago, the price we see today was essentially unprecedented, only having just surpassed $5,000 in September. It would go on to triple and nearly quadruple from there over the next few months, and in the intervening months we have seen a steady decline in both trading highs and volumes. We have often tried to analyze the declining price of bitcoin over the years, but the simple answer is the same as ever: demand has declined and price has therefore declined with it. Those who sold at the highs are now capable of buying their position back by more than 200% if they so choose.

A factor to consider is the homogeneous nature of the cryptocurrency market. This is to say that people who are invested in one cryptocurrency often overlap with those who are invested in others, and so often enough we see money moving from one to the other. In the case of the current decline, however, we’ve seen prices down across the board. A fair argument would state that bitcoin and all other cryptocurrencies are still in fact in a price discovery phase – that the requisite value of a bitcoin is still far from a settled, known quantity.

Prices tend to rise when new money enters the market and settle at new highs as pre-existing holders offload some of their coin. A Cold War of sorts can emerge when low prices continue for a long time, as long-time holders would prefer to capitalize on the next “pump” than to sell at current market rates. In the present era of bitcoin, as well, there is a continual dilution every 10 minutes with the introduction of new coins into the system by people – miners – who must by nature sell their coins, though not necessarily immediately.

Whatever the case, bitcoin is worth many thousands of percent more today than it was when it first started trading almost a decade ago, at which time 10,000 BTC purchased just two large pizzas.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

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Published at Wed, 31 Oct 2018 17:16:03 +0000

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Dan Morehead on Crypto: Dan Morehead on Crypto: “We’re in the First Innings of a Multi-Decade Thing”

Respected hedge fund strategist-turned cryptocurrency investor, Dan Morehead, has come out with some incredibly bullish sentiments about bitcoin. He believes that in the long-term, today’s sub $20,000 price point for a single bitcoin will seem like a bargain. He told CNBC:

“For the big blockchains like bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple, we’re in the first innings of a multi-decade thing… And there’s going to be some ups and there’s going to be some downs, but we’re still really early.”

He elaborated on the non-linear nature of the uptrend, stating that the price could easily have halved by this time next week. Morehead went on to remind viewers of Tuesday’s “The Coin Rush” feature on the CNBC network that if a market grows quickly, it can also shrink fast. To highlight this, he cited the price difference between today and the month just passed. However, the Wall Streeter-turned cryptobull who first bought bitcoin in at $72, remains positive about it’s future.

When asked what the “intrinsic value of bitcoin” was, the former Goldman Sachs, and Tiger Management trader replied:

“If you add up all the different use cases, it’s a payment rail, like a digital gold, and a way to get round correspondent banking, you come up with a number that’s an order of magnitude, or two higher than today’s price.”

The interview then touched on bitcoin mining. Morehead commented on the period of rapid expanse in which the number of units securing the network was doubling every six weeks. He referred to it as like “Moore’s Law on crack.” He went on to explain that as the incentive and competition on the network increases so too does the price of mining the coin itself. This in turn increases the value of each coin.

Perhaps most bullish of all was his estimation that only 5% of institutional investors on the planet have any access to blockchain technologies at all. He anticipates that in the next 18 months, that will no longer be the case.

With interest seemingly growing for further futures markets, the thinking is that additional financial products will begin to appear around the cryptocurrency space in 2018. Of course, the influx of funds will drive the prices much higher than today’s.

 

 

The post Dan Morehead on Crypto: Dan Morehead on Crypto: “We’re in the First Innings of a Multi-Decade Thing” appeared first on NEWSBTC.