National Post

Bitcoin staging a comeback reminiscen­t of 2017 bubble frenzy

- Vildana Ha jric Olga Kharif and

It’s been left for dead more than once, written off as nothing but a bubble and denounced as rat poison by one of the world’s most famous investors. Yet Bitcoin is once again staging a comeback reminiscen­t of the token’s glory days, with evangelist­s pegging their hopes on a technical event as the new catalyst.

True believers say the gains are driven by Bitcoin’s upcoming halving, when the rewards miners receive for processing transactio­ns will be cut in half as soon as May 12. The internet is glutted with second- by- second countdown clocks and the mania is even spurring a hike in hiring by crypto firms worldwide. Bitcoin has rallied to more than US$ 9,000 in anticipati­on from around US$6,000 just a month ago.

“Narratives in the world of blockchain act like the Force in Star Wars — they mysterious­ly move and shape the market,” said George Mcdonaugh, co- founder of crypto and blockchain investment firm KR1. “You couldn’t be blamed for getting a little excited about what’s to come.”

Bitcoin halvings, which slow down the rate at which new tokens are created, happen once every four years or so. Its third such event is set to occur next week. Skeptics argue crypto prices are notoriousl­y volatile and often difficult to pin explanatio­ns to, positing that any appreciati­on should be priced in ahead of time. But crypto fans cite historical precedent.

Bitcoin’s undergone two prior halvings — or halvenings, as they’re sometimes called — which saw its price appreciate in the aftermath. The world’s largest token rose from around US$ 12 to over US$ 1,000 in the year following its 2012 cut in rewards, and advanced about 1,000 per cent in the wake of the 2016 halving, though that reduction happened at a time when the coin was gaining greater mainstream recognitio­n.

The frenzy around digital currencies took it to near US$ 20,000 the following year before it crashed, with the coin still trading about 50 per cent below 2017’s alltime highs.

But Bitcoin has historical­ly bottomed 459 days prior to the halving, risen leading into the event and exploded to the upside afterward, according to research from Pantera Capital. Post- halving rallies have averaged 446 days — should history repeat itself, Bitcoin could peak around August 2021.

Wallet growth has also spiked, rising 2 per cent in April, the largest monthly increase since at least November. To Nicholas Colas at Datatrek Research, there’s two possible explanatio­ns: bored, locked- down gamblers and sports betters are finding their way into cryptocurr­encies amid the coronaviru­s shutdown, while many are also getting excited about Bitcoin’s halving, he wrote in a recent note.

 ?? Dan Kitwoo d / Gett y Imag es ??
Dan Kitwoo d / Gett y Imag es

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada