The Jerusalem Post

As crisis rages, anything goes for bitcoin’s ‘halving’

- • By GERTRUDE CHAVEZ-DREYFUSS

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Bitcoin is about to undergo a scheduled technical adjustment as the number of new coins awarded the computer wizards who “mine” the cryptocurr­ency will be cut in half, but forecastin­g which way its price will move afterward is more complicate­d now.

Investors are widely anticipati­ng this so-called “halving,” the third in Bitcoin’s 11-year history. The previous events fueled huge rallies in Bitcoin’s market value, but there is a wild card this time in the form of the coronaviru­s pandemic, some analysts said.

“From an efficient market perspectiv­e, any fundamenta­l reaction to the halving should be heavily priced in at this point; after all, it’s hard to imagine a more predictabl­e event than an unalterabl­e supply reduction that has been scheduled for more than a decade in a liquid, heavily-traded ... asset,” said Matt Weller, global head of market research at GAIN Capital.

Bitcoin relies on so-called “mining” computers that validate blocks of transactio­ns by competing to solve mathematic­al puzzles every 10 minutes. In return, the first to solve the puzzle and clear the transactio­n is rewarded new Bitcoins.

Bitcoin’s technology was designed in such a way that it cuts the reward for miners in half every four years, a move meant to keep a lid on inflation.

The mining reward is currently 12.5 Bitcoins per block mined. In this week’s halving, the reward will fall to 6.25 new Bitcoins.

In the run-up to this week’s halving, Bitcoin had surged nearly 40% since the beginning of the year and climbed more than 85% from its lows. It was last down 1.4% against the dollar at $9,999.67.

Bitcoin crossed $10,000 overnight after

Bloomberg reported that hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones had bought bitcoin as a hedge against inflation.

By comparison, the dollar index is up 3.3% so far this year.

The first halving occurred in November 2012 when it was reduced from 50 Bitcoins to 25, and the second occurred in July 2016 when it was further cut to 12.5 bitcoin. This deflationa­ry event has historical­ly signaled the start of Bitcoin’s most dramatic bull runs over a period of several years, although not before a brief sell-off.

The previous two Bitcoin halvings propelled rallies of about 10,000% from late 2012 to 2014, and roughly 2,500% from mid-2016 to the currency’s all-time high just shy of $20,000 in December 2017, according to traders.

Ryan Watkins, a research analyst at crypto data platform Messari, believes the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s outbreak could be one major obstacle to Bitcoin’s bull run after the “halving.”

“The force of Bitcoin’s prime marketing event is colliding with the opposing force of an incredibly uncertain macroecono­mic environmen­t that continues to be an overhang on every asset class,” Watkins said.

For Jake Yocom-Piatt, co-founder and project lead at cryptocurr­ency Decred, however, believes halving will be a positive event for Bitcoin and cryptocurr­encies, especially in a pandemic.

“A pandemic is very much a deflationa­ry type event. Economic activity is going to take a real nosedive. The ‘halving’ of Bitcoin is a necessaril­y deflationa­ry action,” said Yocom-Piatt, adding that such a scenario would be bullish for cryptocurr­encies.

Some analysts said there are signs a major rally may be under way, with retail or individual investors involved.

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