Crypto Analysis
- by Kristal Saints
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Jaron Lanier, the original organizer of the 'Delete Facebook' movement joins 'Squawk Alley' to discuss Facebook's cryptocurrency launch.
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Mike Novogratz, a billionaire investor and former Goldman Sachs and Fortress trader, told Erik Schatzker at the Bloomberg Invest Summit in New York that the cryptocurrency market is moving to the $20 trillion region.
January Bubble Wasn’t Really a Bubble
During the interview, which was focused on the economics of the cryptocurrency market, Novogratz was asked by Schatzker about the criticism from skeptics regarding the rapid movement of the valuation of the cryptocurrency market and the bubble-like trend of bitcoin in early 2018.
In response, Novogratz stated that if the January bull rally of bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies is considered as a bubble, it can be described as the 1996 dot com bubble which occurred prior to the 1999 bubble that led the dot com bubble to reach a valuation of $6 trillion before it crashed to $1 trillion.
Eventually, Novogratz stated that the cryptocurrency market will rebound from its major correction in mid-2018 and surpass previous all-time highs to reach a $20 trillion market valuation.
At its peak, the cryptocurrency market was valued at around $900 billion. A $20 trillion valuation would require a 20-fold increase from its previous all-time high.
“[Cryptocurrency] is a global revolution. The internet bubble was only a US thing. It was rich US people participating.
[Cryptocurrency] is global. There are kids in Bangladesh buying coins. It is monstrous in Tokyo, in South Korea, in China, in India, and in Russia. We’ve got a global market and a global mania. This will feel like a bubble when we’re at $20 trillion,” said Novogratz.$20 Trillion Will Not be Easy
While Novogratz is often considered as an optimist and a bull investor in the cryptocurrency sector, he has offered evaluation of the cryptocurrency market based on real indicators, statistics, and realistic overview of the industry.
Novogratz emphasized that despite the growing demand from institutional investors for cryptocurrencies, actual investments that have come in from institutional investors have virtually been non-existent, and the most recent bull rally was triggered by retail investors or individual traders.
Many experts including Blocktower founder Ari Paul have noted in the past that the entrance of institutional investors would require stable and robust custodian solutions.
Given that many cryptocurrency businesses including Coinbase and conglomerates in the traditional finance sector such as Susquehanna have already started to build custodian solutions, it is likely that institutional investors will enter the market in the mid-term.
“It won’t go there ($20 trillion) right away. What is going to happen is, one of these intrepid pension funds, somebody who is a market leader, is going to say, you know what?
We’ve got custody, Goldman Sachs is involved, Bloomberg has an index I can track my performance against, and they’re going to buy. And all of the sudden, the second guy buys. The same FOMO that you saw in retail [will be demonstrated by institutional investors],” explained Novogratz.
https://www.ccn.com/cryptocurrency-will-become-a-20-trillion-market-billionaire-bull-mike-novogratz/
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Dean Louis I think he's totally right, the big players haven't even entered the game yet and up until now it's been Joe Blogs and Granny Smith and unknown individuals that were hoping to make a few dollars, like buying lottery tickets and the buzz from people who did make a pretty penny just encouraged it. When the real players enter the market though, it's going to be a whole different ball game and things are going to get real! Real BIG, real fast! We're on the precipice of the biggest history making event of our time and if we look away for a second, we'll miss it and those that miss it will shrivel up and die, blowing away like tumble weed!
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Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst Cryptocurrency sector can appear to be already huge but in reality is just a baby compared to the traditional financial markets. This is going to change in very few years, when institutional investors and a wider expansion of digital economy happens. Novogratz is not exaggerating.
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Ran Neu Ner, ONchain Capital Founder, discusses regulation and the impact it could have on cryptocurrencies. Should investors buy in here?
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Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst While SEC is mulling regulations, the Blockchain and crypto industry continues working and developing, albeit in a slower way, in the USA environment. Listen to what Ran New New has to say about what he thinks about which cryptos are going up or not and more issues. Do you agree with him? Some of his analysis are very interesting (even shocking!). Then, do your homework and don't invest what you can't afford to loose!
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This is all it would take for bitcoin to become a worthless cryptocurrency - Mar... (marketwatch.com)By
ATULYASARIN
The blockchain economy is imminent, in one form or another. Little doubt remains that we will eventually move toward a world in which most of our transactions will be processed on the blockchain, and we will, over time, use cryptocurrency for our daily transactions.
What remains to be seen is whether bitcoin or a competitor will be that cryptocurrency. Bitcoin BTCUSD, -0.49% has a formidable first-mover advantage. Yet history has shown repeatedly that ‘me-too’ technology can improve on and dominate the first mover.
Recall Webvan, which, despite having a valuation of almost $5 billion in 2001, failed to deliver on the promise of online grocery, paving the way for Instacart and others. Similarly, Myspace, one of the first social-media platforms, was eventually dominated by Facebook and other later arrivals.
What went wrong for Webvan is illustrative of one road bitcoin could take. Webvan’s high valuations prompted higher expectations that led to excessive expansion and subsequent collapse. Similarly, a per-coin valuation that recently peaked at nearly $19,000 and cheerleaders like the Winklevoss twins projecting a target of more than $320,000 have created unrealistic expectations for bitcoin.
Given the current state of the technology, bitcoin’s current price of around $7,000 — although still high compared to most of its history — is a relative disappointment. And this disappointment could lead to the demise of bitcoin.
In all competitive markets, the price at which a product is sold depends on the cost to manufacture it. A product can be priced at a premium only if it requires specialized knowledge or intellectual property that prevents other market participants from manufacturing and selling an identical product.
For example, you may have a brand that others cannot replicate or a patent without which the product cannot be manufactured. As a commodity, no such thing exists for manufacturing bitcoin and other mineable cryptoassets — with limited technical knowledge, anyone can mine bitcoins.
Thus, the price of bitcoin must be close to the fully loaded cost of mining it (meaning you are modestly compensated for your time and capital outlay). Of course, underpinning the equilibrium value is an assumption that there is a use case for bitcoin, the value of which exceeds the cost of mining it.
Read: Here’s how much it costs to mine a single bitcoin in your country
The recent meteoric rise in bitcoin’s price attracted investors who were bound to be disappointed, because the price of bitcoin had far exceeded the cost of mining it. Not surprisingly, the investors who bought at these high prices had losses. But more importantly, the price spike also impacted the composition of bitcoin miners.
The high prices attracted miners who realized that they could make arbitrage profits by mining and selling bitcoin in the futures market. With prices declining, these opportunistic miners are moving away from bitcoin.The cost of making bitcoin is not a fixed-dollar amount; there is a feedback mechanism in mining any commodity.
As the price of bitcoin increases, new entrants who want to mine bitcoin enter the market, increasing the effort required to mine a bitcoin, as its reward will be shared among a larger group of miners. Similarly, when the price of bitcoin falls and miners exit, the cost of mining decreases.
However, the number of miners cannot fall below a certain level, because without the miners providing the computing power to maintain the ledger, the bitcoin blockchain will not remain viable.If the price of bitcoin falls below its cost of mining, it will quickly go to zero.
The real concern is that if the price of bitcoin continues to fall, mining will become infeasible, and without enough participants providing the computing power to record the transactions, the transactions will be infeasible and bitcoin will become worthless.The proponents of bitcoin would argue that we have seen large percentage declines in bitcoin prices before.
Miners were providing the computing power when the price of bitcoin was in triple (or double) digits. But that was a different world — the participants in the bitcoin market were idealists and more interested in changing the world than making a fast buck — and they believed a decentralized monetary system based on bitcoin would enable them to get there.
But the rapid increase in its value prompted traditional investors focused solely on their returns to enter the market. These investors were enabled by the exchanges, which improved the price discovery and liquidity by listing derivatives.
So, even though bitcoin has seen sharp declines before, there are three important differences from the recent decline:
• The magnitudes of past declines have never been as high as the magnitude of the recent decline.
• The losers in the recent decline are new investors who are unlikely to come back to bitcoin until there is much more clarity around bitcoin’s use cases.
• The bitcoin futures markets XBTJ8, +2.66% BTCJ8, +2.73% did not exist before, and these markets allow miners to estimate their mining losses and profits at the outset. If I can buy in a futures market at a price below my mining costs, why would I ever mine for a sure loss?
Bitcoin’s recent decline may signify the beginning of a death spiral — if the price of bitcoin falls below its cost of mining, it will quickly go to zero. The blockchain technology is here to stay, but an improved coin might evolve, or governments might start issuing cryptocurrencies — in which case, bitcoin could become a victim of its own success.
Atulya Sarin is a professor of finance at Santa Clara University. He has written on currencies in his book “Foundations of Multinational Financial Management” (sixth edition) and has worked extensively as a valuation expert.
See more from Marketwatch here: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-is-all-it-would-take-for-bitcoin-to-become-a-worthless-crypto...-
Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst Good reflection on how a death spiral on prices for Bitcoin could happen, and be a victim of its own success, even when the Blockchain and crypto economy is here to stay. However, Bitcoin has a lot of surprises for us yet. What do you think?
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Crypto currency in the blockchain technology is still under development the masses do not yet fully trust or understand this system and with its obvious security risks there is still some ways to go before its fully accepted.
If Facebook indeed launched its coin I find that one key benefit would be that if a vast majority of its 2.41 billion users accepted and gained trust with Libra (knowing it would start out as a stable coin with Fiat backing it up) then that would be an important step towards adoption of crypto currency in our everyday lives. Facebook would then have the responsibility of educating its users beforehand in the usability of their coin within their ecosystem.
Having said that Facebook’s track records in the past have been unethical and on top their security system has been quite the disaster so I find that Facebook should not be given more power than it already has, if anything the data they hold should be watched and secured by the existing users. It’s a double edge sword that if taken lightly we could find our finances deep in their pockets and attempting to contact their unavailable poor customer support for assistant in handling our own finances. Who wants or needs that?
When services were honestly created to make customers lives better but end up alienating customers into just another number in the grand scale of things, becoming a hungry monster out for corporate gains and it’s not a win-win situation anymore it then proceeds to destabilize it sole purpose and with time trust and loyalty is lost.
Isn’t that the whole reason why decentralized finance is so appealing to us all cause we are sick of the way banks have been operating all along?