HotcryptoNews
  • Home
  • Activity
  • News
  • Article
  • About
  • Contact
  • Log In
  • Register

HotcryptoNews

  • Home
  • Activity
  • News
  • Article
  • About
  • Contact
  • Log In
  • Register
0

 

Article

Why Bitcoin’s Next ‘Halving’ May Not Pump the Price Like Last Time

by Irene Loke November 12, 2019November 11, 2019
Posted by Irene Loke November 12, 2019November 11, 2019
Why Bitcoin’s Next ‘Halving’ May Not Pump the Price Like Last Time

Article by Coindesk: Noelle Acheson

Whether you call it the “halving” or the “halvening,” one of the few things we can be sure of in crypto is that the conversation around bitcoin’s upcoming reduction in mining reward will intensify over the next six months.

Why? Because previous halvings have triggered bull runs. And who doesn’t like a bull run?

Many are convinced that the next halving will have the same market effect, and it’s not just a belief that history repeats itself – models have emerged to support this theory.

But if the bull run is expected, why hasn’t it already happened? Why isn’t the halving already priced in?

Because the halving is much more than an event – it is also a narrative, and an uncertain one at that.

What and why

First, a review of what the halving is and why it happens.

To keep inflation under control, the bitcoin protocol was programmed with a hard limit of 21 million, with new bitcoins entering the system as an incentive for network processors (“miners”) in a gradual and controlled rhythm. The rate at which they are created is reduced by half every four years, ostensibly to mimic the increased difficulty of gold mining. On Nov. 28, 2012, the initial reward of 50 new bitcoins was halved to 25, and since July 9, 2016, miners have been receiving 12.5 bitcoins for each block successfully processed.

The next reduction, after which the network incentives will be 6.25 bitcoins per block, is expected in May 2020.


(source: Digital Asset Research – statistical model, not price predictions)

The above chart shows that the price (represented by the light blue line) started moving up before each of the previous halvings, and continued for some time after. Yet the data set is limited – the market has only experienced two of these events, and it could be a stretch to assume that the pattern will repeat itself.

That’s where some fundamental supply/demand analysis comes in.

Supply shock

Bitcoin investor and analyst Tuur Demeester recently pointed out that, for the cryptocurrency to maintain a price of over $8,000 until the next halving, the market would need to see $2.9 billion of investment inflow to offset the deflationary effect of new bitcoins entering the system. Even assuming investment growth remains constant, the reduction in selling pressure after the halving (with fewer new coins hitting the market) would lead to a price boost.

Pseudonymous trader Plan B has gone a step further and used the stock-to-flow (S2F) ratio – which divides current inventory by annual production – to create a model that retroactively predicts past price movements for bitcoin with a high degree of accuracy, using gold and silver as benchmarks. This model predicts a bitcoin price of almost $60,000 after the next halving (the black line in the chart above).

While this model has its critics, it has undergone rigorous cross-examination, and it seems that the regression holds up. It also makes intuitive sense: a reduction in supply should enhance value, all else being equal. So why isn’t the price already heading up to that lofty level?

This is where narrative comes in.

Technically, the halving isn’t a “fundamental” event, in that it does not represent a value driver in traditional investment terms. “Fundamental” in asset analysis refers to variable yet quantifiable features that can drive a valuation, such as profit, market size and balance sheet. In this sense, pre-programmed scarcity is not fundamental, it’s factual.

We can hope that facts themselves are not open to interpretation, but their impact almost always is. No one doubts the halving will happen – yet the narrative around its influence is not clear.

Let’s look at why.

Reasons for skepticism

First, some argue that the halving is already priced in. The move from $3,300 to $12,000 earlier this year? That was it. The market is relatively efficient in terms of information distribution, the argument goes, so smart investors would obviously have incorporated the supply adjustment into their models and taken positions accordingly.

Second, models tend to fit until they don’t. The bitcoin ecosystem today is arguably very different from previous halvings: four years ago, crypto derivatives markets were in their infancy, institutional involvement was slim and valuation frameworks were practically non-existent. It’s not unreasonable for investors to believe that “this time it’s different.”

Some industry insiders have hinted that the halving could be negative if it reduces miners’ profitability and forces many of the smaller ones out of the market. True, this could be offset by a price increase, but if that turns out to not be proportional, increased network centralization could trigger concerns about security.

Also, in traditional markets, price is rarely a function of supply. It’s more influenced by demand, which the S2F model does not take into account. In the absence of an established and widespread fundamental use case (for now), demand in crypto markets is narrative-driven.

Bull run ahead?

Yet in recursive logic, demand could be affected by the halving narrative. The widely held expectation that it will influence the price could stimulate demand for bitcoin as an investment asset, which will influence its price, especially as new investors – attracted by the supply models and historical correlation – enter the sector.

And asymmetric risk comes into the picture: the chance that the models are wrong and I lose everything will have less of an impact on my portfolio than the possibility the models are right and I make a 500% return.

So, even if the supply-driven models are trying to re-write traditional investing principles, it doesn’t mean that we won’t see a price rally.

If that happens, the narrative will coalesce around the confirmation that the supply-based models were right, even if they weren’t the cause. We could end up with the head-spinning cycle of narrative influencing price, and price influencing narrative.

Even so, this would not be the only head-spinning feature of the crypto markets over the coming months. The buzz around bitcoin’s supply schedule will highlight its unique economics, which in turn should awaken even more investor interest.

If this leads to more inflows at a time when new supply falls, the charts that predict a post-halving rally will turn out to have been right all along.

Then again, narratives can be fickle, and brave is the investor who assumes they’ll hold. They also rarely thrive in isolation – and, let’s face it, there are a lot of things going on out there that can have as great an influence on bitcoin’s price.

Either way, it’s hard to deny that the emergence of forecasting models is a positive step that will help us understand market dynamics and bitcoin’s role in a broader financial market. Sophisticated investors will no doubt both welcome these and treat the underlying assumptions with a healthy dose of skepticism.

Disclosure: the author holds small amounts of bitcoin and ether, with no short positions.

Halved persimmon fruit image by Rodrigo Argenton via Wikimedia Commons

bitcoinhalvingprices
0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
Irene Loke

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

previous post
Tunisia To Launch E-Dinar National Currency Using Blockchain
next post
Beginners Guide to Solana: The First Web-Scale Blockchain

related articles

Indian Teen Threatens to Blow Up Miami Airport...

November 7, 2018

Warren Buffett: Bitcoin Is A “Delusion” That “Attracts...

February 27, 2019

Stranger Things: The Upside of Down Bitcoin Prices

January 28, 2019

How 2 Malaysians Built The 2nd Largest Crypto...

April 1, 2019

Waltonchain News: Partnership With Korean Shopping District And...

September 17, 2018

Can Blockchain Create The Marketplace A New Content...

February 6, 2019

Malaysian Government, Universities Team to Put Degrees on...

November 11, 2018

Malaysia Plans to Fight Fake Degrees Using Blockchain...

December 7, 2018

Cryptocurrency Funds, Led by Ether, Take A Brutal...

August 24, 2018

Six New Cryptocurrency ATM Machines Installed Every Day...

December 24, 2018





# Name Price Market Cap Change Price Graph (24h)

Recent Posts

  • In 2019, Students Demanded Blockchain Education. In 2020, It’s Coming
  • In 2019, Students Demanded Blockchain Education. In 2020, It’s Coming
  • Accenture Picked to Build Sweden’s E-Krona Digital Currency Pilot
  • (no title)
  • Volcker Might Have Said Yes to a Digital Dollar – If He Knew What It Was

Archives

  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • January 2018
  • July 2017

Recent Posts

  • In 2019, Students Demanded Blockchain Education. In 2020, It’s Coming

    December 16, 2019
  • In 2019, Students Demanded Blockchain Education. In 2020, It’s Coming

    December 16, 2019
  • Accenture Picked to Build Sweden’s E-Krona Digital Currency Pilot

    December 16, 2019

Facebook Feed

Facebook

Categories

  • Activity
  • Article
  • Bitcoin
  • Editors' Choice
  • Event
  • Latest News
  • News
  • Uncategorized
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Email

@2018 - HotcryptoNews. All Right Reserved.