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Cryptocurrency Bull Market Is Far From Over

Published 01/17/2022, 05:37 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • An ugly start to 2022
  • Volatility is the hallmark of the asset class
  • Inflation is not going away anytime soon and will continue to erode fiat currency values
  • Fintech and inflation - Cryptos provide an alternative
  • Bitcoin and Ethereum will find bottoms - The bull market is not over

The US Federal Reserve abandoned the characterization of rising inflation as “transitory” at the December FOMC meeting. After President Biden nominated Chairman Powell for a second term, and in the aftermath of the latest consumer price index data, the Fed accelerated tapering quantitative easing, setting the stage for liftoff from a zero percent Fed Funds rate as early as the March 2022 FOMC meeting.

In the early days of 2022, the central bank has gone back and forth about reducing its balance sheet. Still, the December FOMC minutes reflected that moving from quantitative easing to quantitative tightening is possible over the coming months.

Inflation weighs on fiat currency values as it erodes purchasing power. The declines in the dollar, euro, pound, yen, and other fiat currencies that derive their value from the full faith and credit in the governments that issue legal tender is not readily apparent when measuring one foreign exchange instrument versus another. However, the fiats have lost value when measured against stocks, commodities, real estate, and cryptocurrencies in 2021.

Cryptocurrencies are an alternative to other means of exchange that reflect a libertarian economic ideology. While central banks, treasuries, monetary authorities, and governments can expand and tighten monetary policy to impact the money supply, cryptocurrencies are different. Crypto values depend on supply and demand established by market participants without government interference. Therefore, inflationary pressures likely caused the over 180% rise in the asset class’s market cap in 2021.

Bull markets rarely move in a straight line, and corrections can be swift and brutal. In a volatile asset class like cryptos, the price action has been nothing short of head-spinning, and the cryptocurrency asset class has started 2022 on a bearish note.

An ugly start to 2022

The leading cryptocurrencies and the asset class’s market cap began falling on Nov. 10 and continued to move lower so far in 2022.Bitcoin Daily

Source: CQG

As the chart illustrates, January Bitcoin futures put in a bearish key reversal trading pattern on Nov. 10 when the price reached a high of $69,820 and closed below the previous day’s low. On Dec. 31, 2021, the futures closed at $46,275, and at the end of last week, the leading cryptocurrency was at the $43,330 level, 37.9% below the Nov. 10 high. 

Ethereum Daily

Source: CQG

January Ethereum futures reached a high of $4,972.75 on Nov. 10, put in the same bearish pattern, and closed 2021 at the $3,685 level. At $3,340 on Jan. 14, Ethereum was 32.8% below its mid-November record peak.

Meanwhile, the cryptocurrency asset class’s market cap was $2.166 trillion on Dec. 31 and stood at $2.091 trillion on Jan. 17, a 3.5% decline so far in 2022. Bitcoin and Ethereum are 6.4% and 9.4% lower, respectively, in 2022. The leading cryptos have underperformed the asset class so far this year as other tokens have done better than the two dominant cryptocurrencies.

Volatility is the hallmark of the asset class

Market participants are accustomed to wild price swings in the cryptocurrency asset class, with token prices routinely doubling, tripling, and more than halving in value.  Bitcoin Weekly

Source: CQG

The weekly Bitcoin futures chart shows that weekly historical volatility traded between 42.57% and 128.50% in 2021. At the 50.9% level on Jan. 14, the price variance metric was closer to the low than the high since the beginning of 2021.Ethereum Weekly

Source: CQG

Ethereum futures began trading in February 2021. Weekly historical volatility traded from a low of 38.92% to a high of 149.95% from February through December 2021. At the 49.7% level on Jan. 14, weekly Ethereum volatility was also near the low.

The decline in price variance shows that the leading cryptos are consolidating after the moves from the Nov. 10 high. While both made lower lows in early 2022, the price action has calmed, with Bitcoin and Ethereum prices recovering from the recent bottoms.

Inflation is not going away anytime soon and will continue to erode fiat currency values

Last week, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the consumer price index rose in December, reaching 7% in 2021. The core inflation barometer that excludes food and energy was at 5.5%. The Fed’s inflation target is an average of 2%. The producer price index rose by nearly 10% in 2021.

The central bank has accelerated tapering quantitative easing, which looks set to end in March 2022, setting the stage for liftoff from a zero percent short-term Fed Funds rate. Moreover, the Fed has discussed reducing its balance sheet, which involves allowing debt securities to roll off its swollen balance sheet when they mature. Balance sheet reduction would move the central bank from quantitative easing to quantitative tightening, encouraging higher interest rates further along the yield curve.

Meanwhile, the FOMC’s most recent forecasts call for a 0.90% Fed Funds rate in 2022 and 1.60% in 2023. Even if inflation begins to recede, which is no certainty, short-term real interest rates will remain negative throughout 2022 and perhaps in 2023. The real rate of interest is current rates minus the rate of inflation.

Inflation eats away at money’s purchasing power. Over the past nearly two years, central bank liquidity, government stimulus, and pandemic-related supply chain issues lit an inflationary fuse that will be challenging to extinguish. Moreover, a labor shortage forcing wages higher is feeding the inflationary fire.

Fintech and inflation - Cryptos provide an alternative

The fintech revolution has increased the speed and efficiency of banking and finance. Fintech’s evolution includes the new means of exchange, cryptocurrencies. Governments are notoriously slow-moving institutions. The US Fed’s response to inflation is a perfect example of a delayed reaction to an economic event. People tend to vote with their pocketbooks and wallets. The faith in government institutions has declined as inflation rose over the past months.

Fintech addresses speed and efficiency. It should come as no surprise that cryptocurrencies have become inflation-sensitive instruments. Since governments have not interfered in the markets, the value is a function of buying and selling in the market. Moreover, while governments can issue fiat currencies to their hearts' content, crypto supplies are only expanded by mining activities.

With inflation at the highest level in four decades, cryptocurrency values will likely find bottoms and resume their upward trajectory.

Bitcoin and Ethereum will find bottoms - The bull market is not over

Bull markets rarely move in straight lines, and corrections can be brutal. The decline in Bitcoin from nearly $70,000 to below $40,000 per token at the most recent low is an example of how corrective price action can shake the faith of even the most devoted bull.

However, cryptos are not the only markets that experience severe bull market corrections. NYMEX crude oil futures fell from a high of $85.41 in late October to a low of $62.43 in early December, a 26.9% drop in six weeks. COMEX copper futures traded from a high of $4.8985 per pound in May 2021 to a low of $3.9615 in August, a 19.1% decline in three months. Lumber futures moved from $1711.20 in May 2021 to a low of $488 per 1,000 board feet in August, a 71.5% correction.

Commodity prices have recovered since reaching the lows, and I suspect that Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies are on the same path. Inflation erodes money’s purchasing power, and we measure the value of cryptocurrencies and other assets in dollar terms. Elevated inflation and negative real interest rates are likely to lead to a continued pattern of higher lows and higher highs in cryptocurrencies and many other asset classes.

Latest comments

we need a more fair world, cryptos are inevitable
it is absolutely over for now... until banks print another +10$$$ TRILLION...
pump and dump ponzi schemes, the only 'currency' that is not backed by anything.
this author was good until he started with cryptos. should have stuck to commodities
I dont care… nor do many of us… crypto is pump n’ dump times 1000…
Many do care. Just cause your not successful at something doesnt make it a pump and dump. Most are uneducated on crypto. Its only getting bigger and bigger buddy. Pick what you like and enjoy what you do. Dont bash something cause your not good at it.
I dont know about yall but I invest in blockchain tech not cryptos. You cant stop technological advancement. Simple as that. Invest in blockchain development companies not bitcoin.
can you please give more insight on this?
Bitcoin, Ether and a few thousand other crypto brands may fly and/or die but blockchain will be a major part of the future of the world. WEB3. 0 the meta verse and loads of stuff sort of like the internet when it took off. Everyone said "I'll never spend money or bank on the internet" but they swallowed that comment years later. There are ETFs, funds and companies that will grow as crypto gains ground. Take a look at chips, crypto miners and computer companies that feed the frenzy.
Ethereum will run more than you could imagine in ten years. Its a remarkable concept being adapted widely worldwide. Its all changing to blockchain. Look at VeChain and how there integrated in shipping and tracking. Not much dying going to happen on crypto that has utility like Vechain aming many others.
the trouble with the cryptos is there is no way to know, when or if it will go up and down..... we do not know who holds them and for what purpose so any guess is right and wrong.....????
I agree with Curon .. very wrong .. learn to read charts and you’ll know bitcoin’s potential next move
u said it, BTC's "potential" next move. the problem with BTC is there is no fundementals.....it is a non yielding asset that has zero physical use case. no one "needs" BTC for anything. so u can look at stock to flow and all the models the pumpers continue to tout but at the end of the day BTC is literally worth what someone will pay for it.
that's why people trading BTC always default to technical analysis. there is no fundamentals, oh yes, I forgot, China and Elon
Geez the Sell Signal of 2022!!!!
Don't you all know this site of quite obscure origin has an agenda. Guess what! Providing liquidity to institutions, as simple as.
I bet there was a point in a far land in far away history where someone - not unlike the author - said the same thing about tulips. Well at least you can plant those and get a reasonably beautiful flower instead of wasting energy. IF bitcoin at ten thousands of USD a piece is a hedge against inflation or just a brutally overvalued piece of nothingness is not decided yet. Not enough history to know where a "fair value" might possibly lie. Maybe it is a really good hedge against inflation when bought at 3000 USD a piece? Who knows. Might be worth shifting the attention to far less overvalued alternatives like gold and silver. Have been forgotten in the shadows of a crypto mania last year. But whatever happens - it doesn`t seem likely there will be a similar mania this year. Meanwhile Gold has closed last year at a loss - which is even bigger in real terms counting in inflation. My hunch says it won`t stay as cheap forever..
its not real gold, its qute crypto-gold. Amounts of tradable gold exceeds real gold in *******times. Same X's here. All is a bubble.
Oh yes , it's over . Anyone realize cryptos are fraud and a ponzi scheme as they have NO intrinsic value ! They are created out of thin air !!
betweewn 2016 to 2021 the us created 23% more dollars than were created in the last 200 years combined. Look it up
Still using the no intrinsic value argument. Really? The value of the dollar is based on the faitu and confidence of the American government. Whats intrinsic about that?? And tell me sir, how is the fed printong money for purchasing treasuries any different??
Better than growth stock with negative intrinsic value.. dude you're newbie
Lol take alll excess liquidity out and since how bullish people are on this asset
Now the market should wait at least for a pullback from this huge correction.
Fiat currencies are a medium of exchange... no tangible backing... unless you are a currency trader, rarely held as an investment or hedge against inflation... CRYPTO... limited medium of exchange... notangible backing... widely held as a speculation... now held as a hedge against inflation... Really? We never heard that justification until inflation became a topic... and recently CRYPTO seems to be a bad hedge... One day the Whales will HARPOON the little guys in the row boat and GAME OVER...
 agreed - only BTC may, in the future be a hedge against inflation, but only because investors decide it's rarity / scarcity like gold makes it so - but that cannot be said for the other 16000 plus cryptos in the market - there is no scarcity when a new coin type is created each day and a trillion of coins within that type are produced - that's entirely speculative bubble as you so rightly say - this guy writing the article hasn't got a clue what he's on about, unless he's deliberatelys shilling of course - crypto is Nasdaq on steriods and as such as inflation and inevitably interest rates rise, they're going to crater - starting today
💯
Cryptocrap ponzi scheme. Really crypto just needs enough liqudity to sustain the blockchain transactions. Most of the soeculative value is its use as a hedge against negative real interest rates. Its an expensive put to trade however.
Yes with the central banks secretly buying and selling it , definitely !
Excellent
Time to trade a much older currency which also does not rely on any third party. Gold and silver are entering a new phase of their bull market, while cryptos - all 13,000+ of them - are stuck in a bear market with nothing left to pull them out of it.
Gold is a joke for the ill informed. Only losers and the ignorsnt invest in gold!
might be.but you do know that the US government themselves own almost 70,000 Bitcoin.look it up
Bitcoin from $69K to $41K…defined as a Bull Market?
yeah and below the 200 daily MA - that's a bear market!!!!
The difference is commodities are an asset with a tangible holding, shares in a company - the company for the most part will have revenue/assets. If you invest in traditional currency markets - that currency will have a government act as a guarantor of payment. With cryptocurrency and NFTs, there is no physical asset, there is no guarantor that that asset can use as a last resort. They are only worth as much as the next person is willing to pay/accept for it similar to a big Ponzi scheme. China and Russia have made cryptocurrency trading illegal. The Fed could do the same with one stroke of a pen. Powell saying will publish Fed thoughts on Crypocurriences in the next few weeks (I can't see it being banned as $$ in it for money markets - but can see a big crackdown on). Can see that causing another major dip in Bitcoin back below 30k support and once that breaks the next support is a long way down around 11,000...Only then can see it rebound
Elaborate and excellent article
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