The Citizen (Gauteng)

Bitcoin gets boring now

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London – After bouncing up, falling down and keeping investors on the edges of their seats, bitcoin may be maturing into a period of relatively boring stability, experts say.

A worldwide wave of regulation has led to a collapse in trading volumes. Cryptocurr­ency advertisem­ents are disappeari­ng from top internet pages, and bitcoin no longer dominates Google searches.

As investors try to figure out what bitcoin wants to be when it grows up, the bestknown cryptocurr­ency is going through somewhat of an existentia­l crisis.

“It needs a new narrative,” said Nicholas Colas, New York-based founder of investment research firm DataTrek. “There is every chance that if there is some sort of institutio­nal involvemen­t, there could be a move higher.”

Bitcoin rallied 25% in April after crashing 70% from a high near $20 000 (R274 000) late last year.

The cryptocurr­ency landscape has indeed changed. Mom-and-pop investors who drove bitcoin’s skyrocket rise in 2017, have been pushed aside by government bans on trading and replaced by cryptocurr­ency funds, wealthy individual­s and establishe­d financial firms.

The bigger players can make bigger moves, but their trades are often obscured by screens on over-the-counter (OTC) brokerages and matching platforms.

They are also less likely to chase sudden swings in bitcoin’s value, being more interested in the potential of unproven but promising blockchain technology.

Average daily traded volumes across cryptocurr­ency exchanges fell to $9.1 billion in March, and to $7.4 billion in the first half of April, compared with $17 billion in December, according to data compiled by crypto analysis website CryptoComp­are.

Several exchanges saw their daily trading volumes drop by more than half between December and March, including Bitfinex, Poloniex, Coinbase and Bitstamp, the data shows.

Cryptocurr­encies’ biggest-ever trading day was December 22, when volumes topped $30 billion, according to CryptoComp­are.

On April 8, volume sagged to $4.6 billion, the weakest day since last October.

A Thomson Reuters survey this week found one in five financial institutio­ns is considerin­g trading cryptocurr­encies in the next 12 months. Of those, 70% plan to trade in the next three to six months. – Reuters

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