Are Cryptocurrency markets over? Quite the contrary

Melis
5 min readDec 3, 2018

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Think back to this time last year.

As you probably remember, Bitcoin was the dominant theme of the day, whether around the dinner table or in the news headlines.

Crypto prices had soared throughout 2017, climbing from $1,000 at the beginning of the year to around $7,500 by last November’s Thanksgiving holiday.

Then, over the course of that single weekend, Bitcoin jumped to nearly $10,000 as the buying frenzy heated up.

In a matter of days, crypto-broker Coinbase opened hundreds of thousands of new accounts during the 2017 Thanksgiving weekend.

Mobs of speculators were piling in, bidding the price up to new highs on a daily basis, until it cracked $20,000 a month later.

We started warning about this in early November last year, arguing that, while crypto represented great technology to improve the financial system, Bitcoin’s rapid price rise was “purely speculative… not sustainable demand,” and “anything that’s pure speculation is eventually going to pop.”

At the end of 2017, we told you about Saxo Bank’s prediction that Bitcoin would collapse to $1,000 in 2018.

If things keep up this way, they may be proven right.

Bitcoin peaked in early January and has declined throughout 2018 along the lines of Hemingway’s famous quote about going broke: “gradually, then suddenly.”

What a difference a year makes.

Last December and in early January we wrote about how this could happen, explaining that crypto prices were ‘reflexive.’

In other words, as Bitcoin’s price rose rapidly, more people wanted to buy it because they believed the price would continue rising. This created a ton of demand.

But at the same time, very few people were willing to sell. Anyone who owned Bitcoin saw that the price was rising so rapidly and figured, “Why sell today if I can sell tomorrow at a higher price?”

This mismatch of extreme demand and reduced supply caused the price to jump, which created even more demand and reduced supply.

It was all based on a belief that crypto prices would continue rising.

And as we wrote last year, it would work the same in reverse: everyone selling and few people buying causes huge price declines, which makes even more people want to sell and fewer people want to buy.

That’s exactly what we’re seeing now.

I personally know several die-hard Bitcoin fanatics who have finally capitulated and are selling out, getting whatever they can, while they can.

That’s because a lot of folks who profited from crypto’s price rise never actually cashed out.

They believed that the Bitcoin price would continue rising and made blanket assertions like “Bitcoin is going to $1 million. . .”

In the meantime, they loaded up on expensive houses, cars, boats, etc., much of it financed by debt.

Yet while the value of their crypto assets has collapsed 80% from the peak, they still have to service that debt.

So now they are selling in a panic, simply so that they won’t have to declare personal bankruptcy.

Does that mean it’s over? Are Bitcoin and its cousins headed for the historical dustbin alongside Dutch tulips and Pets.com?

There are so many worthless coins and tokens out there, and many of them are absolutely headed to zero. Bitcoin correction is nothing new inside financial markets. Technology will improve. Adoption will come. It’s a bumpy road and those who thought everything was smooth and straight ahead are facing losses. Why? They believe in easy money. They didn’t take some time to study what is Bitcoin and what can do for them. They still believe in fiat money. They still believe in savings that are “safe” in bank accounts and securities (i.e. T-bonds). They don’t have the instruments to understand why Bitcoin could change their lives and improve them. They don’t care about individual responsibility. But if they don’t care about economics, then economics will take care of them. Next credit crisis will open their eyes.

We think there will continue to be demand for utility-specific coins for things like privacy or more secure e-commerce.

The concept of Bitcoin is still sound: a medium of exchange that isn’t controlled or manipulated by central bankers, that’s widely accepted across the world for online transactions with minimal costs.

That was the original idea behind Bitcoin as described in its first white paper a decade ago.

Look at the banking system as an example: It’s almost 2019. Yet it still often takes 3–5 days to transfer money, whether it’s a domestic ACH transfer in the Land of the Free, or a cross border wire internationally.

Seriously. Are these banks loading crates of cash onto a boat and shipping money via sea freight to one another? It doesn’t make any sense.

Sending money should be as easy as sending email. And the Distributed Ledger Technology that was created around cryptocurrencies makes this possible.

Shockingly, banks are hard at work to make this a reality. It’s as if the rise of crypto finally scared them into raising the bar and improving their services.

But there are countless other industries where these types of applications are sorely needed.

A few decades ago, entrepreneurs (and the investors who funded them) made vast fortunes applying the new technology of the consumer Internet in ways that fundamentally changed our lives– how we shop, share and store information, consume media, engage in personal relationships, etc.

That same opportunity exists today with crypto and DLT.

So from that perspective, this ride is far from over. It’s just beginning.

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Melis
Melis

Written by Melis

MultiSignature, MultiUser, MultiDevice Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, Dogecoin, Litecoin, Bitcoin SV, BCHA, Groestlcoin Wallet: https://www.melis.io/

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