INSIGHTS
Curated insights from
crypto experts
What’s happening in crypto, and why does it matter? Sharpen your knowledge with the latest research and commentary from the CIG team.
BITCOIN HALVING :
The money supply function of the Bitcoin protocol is the polar opposite of Quantitative Easing. The Bitcoin code states a total of 21 million coins will be released and the supply of new coins will decrease over time.
Today 6.25 bitcoins are issued every ten minutes. There’s no “Greenspan put” if a politically-powerful group like homeowners or people who own equities is suffering. It’s just 6.25 BTC every ten minutes.
Every four years that “block reward” is cut in half, thus it’s referred to as “the halving”. This process repeats until the year 2140 A.D., when the Zeno’s Paradox ceases at 21 million bitcoins.
Bitcoin’s supply and coin distribution ruleset is based purely on mathematics – predictable and transparent by design.
“Total circulation will be 21,000,000 coins. It’ll be distributed to network nodes when they make blocks, with the amount cut in half every four years. First four years: 10,500,000 coins. Next four years: 5,250,000 coins. Next four years: 2,625,000 coins. Next four years: 1,312,500 coins. Etc. . . .”
— Satoshi Nakamoto, The Cryptography Mailing List, January 8, 2009
THE HALVING IS NIGH
The next halving is projected to occur on March 22, 2024. The mining reward will decrease from 6.25 BTC per block to 3.125 BTC per block.
Efficient Markets Theory would hold that if we **all** know it’s going to happen, then it has to be priced in. Paraphrasing a line attributed to Warren Buffet on the dogma, “The markets are almost always efficient, but the difference between almost and always is $80 billion to me.” Thus, even if we think everybody knows something, it doesn’t mean there isn’t a ton of money to be made.
“Investing in a market where people believe in efficiency is like playing bridge with someone who has been told it doesn’t do any good to look at the cards”
— Warren Buffet, 1984, as cited by Davis, 1990
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Technical Analysis
Technical analysis is a statistical trading strategy. By performing various statistical calculations on historical price data, you attempt to uncover trends in the market. Technical trading is based on the belief that past prices have some effect on what future prices will be.
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Read our collection of insights informed by deep research and analysis.
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Unpacking the Intricate Relationship Between Bitcoin and Inflation
Unpacking the Intricate Relationship Between Bitcoin and Inflation It was only two years ago that an endorsement by legendary investor Paul Tudor Jones catapulted bitcoin’s potential as an inflation hedge into the mainstream. Since then, a number of other prominent macro investors, such as Stanley Druckenmiller and Ray Dalio, also built allocations on similar grounds. By now it’s clear that Jones’ “Great Monetary Inflation” thesis was proven correct and his bitcoin investment delivered a tremendous return. But it was even more recently that inflationary concerns became the broad consensus in the market. Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman was still defending the thesis that inflation would be transitory in mid-November. Since then, however, all five CPI prints marked new four-decade highs, with no signs of abating. One puzzling aspect to all of this is that, now that inflation is unequivocally with us, bitcoin’s price performance has been underwhelming. Its average return on these five record-breaking inflation release days was a paltry -0.90%. This behaviour has led many—including enthusiasts, skeptics, and those in between—to question if bitcoin is actually an inflation hedge, just a proxy for tech stocks, or something else. We at CIG have long been advocating that bitcoin can be better understood as an emerging monetary asset and hedge against inflation. What is less commonly understood is that over the last couple of years bitcoin has actually been making remarkable progress in establishing itself as such. Bitcoin Price Action Versus Forward-Looking, High-Frequency Inflation Data Measuring the sensitivity of asset returns to inflation is actually a much harder problem than meets the eye. Among many challenges, perhaps the most relevant is that inflation indices like the CPI reflect past data; they are most relevant to market price action only to the extent that they change future expectations. Another problem is that they only come once a month, which gives us a relatively small sample size to work with. One still-imperfect but arguably better alternative is to focus on inflation expectations embedded in the U.S. Treasury market, or the so-called breakeven inflation rates. By looking at the difference between two equivalent assets that only differ in whether they offer inflation protection, one can get a forward-looking gauge of what the market thinks inflation will do going forward. Another advantage is that breakeven inflation rates are available continuously, therefore yielding us plenty of data points. The chart below shows the price of bitcoin and the five-year inflation breakeven rate, or the market’s estimate of what inflation will be, on average, over the following five years. The data starts on January 1, 2020, which is shortly before the inflation narrative around bitcoin started to gain steam. BITCOIN HAS ESTABLISHED A VISIBLE RELATIONSHIP WITH INFLATION EXPECTATIONS SINCE 2020 Categories RESEARCH BRIEFS WHITE PAPERS how can we help you? Stay in the know Stay abreast of the latest news, insights, and trends in crypto. contacts Archives November 2022 August 2022 Bitcoin daily price (in USD, on the right axis) and five-year breakeven inflation (% on the left axis). Data from January 1, 2020 to April 25, 2022. The chart above shows an imperfect, sometimes laggy, but most of the time clear relationship between the price of bitcoin and inflation expectations. For example, bitcoin bottomed during the COVID crisis virtually at the same time inflation expectations did, and the April and November 2021 bitcoin market tops also roughly coincided with local tops in inflation expectations. It also helps explain why bitcoin did not perform well during the record-high CPI prints that came out between November 2021 and the first couple of months of 2022. The reason is that inflation expectations during that time it actually going down, not up. It might sound counterintuitive, but red-hot inflation today can sometimes translate into lower future inflation expectations as a result of the Fed being incentivized to take a firmer stance to fight inflation from there on. But the chart above also leaves an open question: Why is bitcoin lagging despite inflation expectations jumping higher over the last couple of months? The Bitcoin/Inflation Relationship in the Present Market Environment Contrary to the previous recent upticks in inflation expectations, which came on the back of consistently increasing monetary and fiscal stimuli, the most recent one comes amid additional concerns. Part of the more recent inflation pressure is coming from the Ukraine war, which triggered disruptions in key commodity markets. The increasingly hawkish rhetoric from the Fed and other central banks so far has not been enough to offset this trend, and is also raising concerns about how far they can tighten before something breaks in the real economy. Under this backdrop, the relationship between changes in inflation expectations and risk asset returns has been turning more complex. For some assets, such as commodities, rising inflation expectations in this new environment have been a boon while for others, such as high-flying growth assets, they have been a curse. The bitcoin investment case sits somewhere in between these two extremes. On one hand, many are increasingly recognizing it as a commodity whose intrinsic properties can provide shelter against monetary mismanagement. On the other hand, most place it in the “potentially disruptive but yet unproven technology” bucket, and some still cast doubt on its entire raison d’être in the first place. But the data shows that the former group—bitcoin as an inflation hedge—is making significant headway against the latter. The chart below shows the correlations between changes in inflation expectations and the returns of bitcoin (black line) and 13 other risk assets including domestic and international equities, bonds, commodities, and real estate (aggregated in the green shade). All asset prices are smoothed by applying a 90-day moving average so as to filter out the short-term market gyrations and allow us to focus on the longer-term trend at play. BITCOIN’S EMERGENCE AS A INFLATION HEDGE One-year rolling correlations of daily returns for bitcoin (black line) and select risk assets (green shade) versus changes in five-year breakeven inflation, smoothed by 90-day moving average. Data
August 26, 2022 Read more
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Crypto Market Cycle? Leveraging On-Chain Data to Contextualize Key Market Trends
Crypto Market Cycle? Leveraging On-Chain Data to Contextualize Key Market Trends In this column, we leverage on-chain data on Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), the two largest crypto assets, to evaluate where we are in the crypto market cycle. Specifically, we examine three key trends: geographical flows, positioning by investor type, and market sentiment. Crypto is especially suitable for such explorations because all transactions are recorded pseudonymously in a public ledger (aka the blockchain). By combining blockchain transaction data with additional datasets, it is possible to infer critical market trends in a way that is not possible for more traditional asset classes. Geographical Flows: The Crypto Accumulation Trend by North American Entities—A Defining Trend of the Past Bull Market—Dipped and Stalled in Q2 2022 One amazing thing about on-chain data is that you can determine, to a reasonable degree, the geographical source of buying and selling pressure in crypto. By crossing blockchain transaction data, known addresses belonging to specific crypto entities, and web traffic flows, one can estimate which countries or regions are sending and receiving assets. A defining trend of the crypto bull market over the past couple of years has been the accumulation of crypto by North American (mainly U.S.) entities, with outflows coming from the Asian markets. According to Chainalysis’ data, between January 1, 2020 and November 9, 2021, when the crypto market reached its all-time high, the net flow into North American entities was north of 645,000 BTC and 4.5 million ETH, over 3% of the total outstanding supply of each asset. However, as the chart below shows, this trend has not only tapered off since then but also slightly reversed during last quarter’s crypto crash. Since May, when the market deterioration became more acute, the cumulative net flow into North American entities decreased by as much as 9.6% and 9.9% for BTC and ETH respectively, while the same metric for Asian and European entities was by and large on the rise. This is consistent with evidence from key players: Just two days ago, Coinbase, the leading North American crypto exchange, reported that a majority of Q2 trading volume took place in offshore exchanges, while the share of total crypto market capitalization held on its platform dipped from 11.2% in Q1 to 9.9% in Q2. Categories RESEARCH BRIEFS WHITE PAPERS how can we help you? Stay in the know Stay abreast of the latest news, insights, and trends in crypto. contacts Archives November 2022 August 2022 Positioning by Investor Type: Outflows From Larger Entities, Inflows Into Smaller OnesAnother way to slice and dice blockchain data is to cluster it into entities by the size of their crypto holdings. Zooming in on entities with relatively low turnovers (to capture “investors” vs. “traders”), we can see the accumulated flows into entities that hold between 0 and 0.1 BTC or ETH, between 0.1 and 1, and so on. In this section, we’ll be focusing on entities that have a relatively low turnover, which are more likely to be investors instead of traders, and will exclude the entities with extremely large holdings, which are more likely to be exchanges. As crypto prices started to tank more sharply in May, larger entities have been registering outflows while relatively smaller entities have been seeing inflows. The trend is stronger for BTC than for ETH: Since May, smaller investors have accumulated about 2% of the total BTC supply but less than 0.5% of the total ETH supply. This trend also marks a pause from the crypto bull market of the last two years, in which larger entities drove the lion’s share of crypto accumulation. The fact that this trend has been stronger for BTC than for ETH confirms our perception that the latter has been gaining traction in larger investors’ minds, as excitement around the upcoming upgrade and ethereum’s roadmap continues to build. Outflows From Exchanges and Other Larger Entities Into Smaller Entities Market Sentiment: Implied Unrealized Losses Suggest the Worst Is Behind Us The third and final analysis to consider is implied unrealized profit, or the current profit or loss of every held position, in entities that hold Bitcoin or Ethereum. This metric has historically been most useful as a contrarian indicator: The higher the percentage of holders sitting on unrealized losses, the more likely the market is close to capitulation, and therefore the more favorable the timing for potential buyers is. As the old stock market proverb goes: “Buy at the roar of cannons and sell at the sound of trumpets.” The chart below shows the percentage of the total BTC and ETH supply that sits on an unrealized loss, broken down by the loss size (between 0 and -5%, between -5% and -25%, and so on). The percentage of the supply currently in losses stands at a tad below 50% for BTC and at over 60% for ETH. Perhaps even more striking, the entities that are currently sitting on losses of over 50% currently comprise over 40% for both BTC and ETH. Since 2017, such levels were seen only during the March 2020 COVID crash, the 2019 correction, and the worst parts of the 2018 crypto winter. Although further demand shocks cannot be ruled out, the historical record suggests when investor sentiment is this negative, reversals can happen relatively quickly. Bitcoin (top chart) and ethereum (bottom chart) percentage of supply by ranges of unrealized loss. Data from January 1, 2020 to July 18, 2022. The Percentage of Supply Currently in the Red Has Parallels Only to the 2018 Crypto Winter and the COVID Crisis Conclusion It is worth noting that on-chain data is not perfect. Geographical flows can be estimated only for entities that are known to be based in a specific location, and are based on web traffic data, which might not reflect actual transaction volume accurately. Positioning by investor type cannot be detected for entities that don’t touch the blockchain directly, and no blockchain analytics company fully describes the behaviour of all entities that hold crypto
August 26, 2022 Read more
Browse our insights
- Tax Rate of Crypto
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What Is the Tax Rate of Crypto Day Trading?
How Is Cryptocurrency Taxed? (2021 and 2022 IRS Rules) When you make money on crypto, Uncle Sam’s going to want a piece. It’s not the most exciting part of crypto investing, but if you do invest…
Do you pay taxes on crypto in the USA?
You’re required to pay taxes on crypto. The IRS classifies Cryptocurrency as property, and cryptocurrency transactions are taxable by law just like transactions related to any other property…
Crypto tax rates for 2021
Cryptocurrency tax rates depend on your income, tax filing status, and the length of time you owned your crypto before selling it. If you owned it for 365 days or less, then you pay short-term gains taxes, which are equal to income taxes…
Crypto tax rates for 2022
The IRS adjusted the tax brackets for 2022 to follow inflation. Here are the long-term cryptocurrency tax rates that will apply when you file your 2022 tax return next year…
How to determine if you owe crypto taxes
You owe crypto taxes if you spend your crypto and it has increased in value from when you first bought it. Here are the different types of taxable events for cryptocurrency transactions…
How to report crypto on taxes
Crypto gains and losses are reported on Form 8949. To fill out this form, provide the following information about your crypto trades…
How is crypto income taxed?
Crypto income is taxed as ordinary income at its fair market value on the date the taxpayer receives it. Here are the most common examples of what is considered crypto income…
Do you pay capital gains on crypto?
Crypto is taxed like stocks and other types of property. When you realize a gain after selling or disposing of crypto, you’re required to pay taxes on the amount of the gain…
What Are the Downsides of Day Trading Crypto?
Many fortunes have been made in cryptocurrency, but it is important to always keep in mind that many, many more have been lost. The flip side of …
Related investing topics
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Investing in Metaverse Stock
The Metaverse is defined as a digital, three-dimensional world that’s immersive and accessible in real time by an unlimited number of people, allowing for social interactions…
How to invest in the Metaverse
Investors can approach this secular trend from many different directions. Consider the following non-exhaustive list of potential layers to the Metaverse …
Buying Virtual Land in the Metaverse
Buying virtual land in the Metaverse isn’t as difficult as it may seem. You’re already just a few clicks from being a digital property owner.
Real estate has always been an
Why would you buy metaverse real estate?
Interest in augmented reality, virtual reality, and Metaverse real estate really spiked after social media giant Facebook (NASDAQ:META) changed its name to Meta and…
How do you buy and sell virtual land?
It’s not difficult to buy and sell digital assets in the Metaverse. Most Metaverse platforms can be accessed easily with a desktop computer, making it very simple to inspect …
Best Metaverse stocks to buy
As previously mentioned, it could be many years before the Metaverse exists in its fullest form. So the best Metaverse stocks to buy today are companies that are already …
Where can I buy metaverse stocks?
To buy stocks and ETFs, investors need to have a brokerage account. The best brokerages are extremely user-friendly, allowing accounts to be opened with no minimum deposit and also offering zero-fee trades.
What about metaverse cryptocurrencies?
There’s still a long way to go with the Metaverse trend, and it could take various paths. One question is whether the bulk of the Metaverse will be built by corporate entities or …
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The Final Word
There’s no doubt that day trading is a high-risk activity. That’s why researching and learning the market is essential, no matter which crypto day trading strategy you choose. A number of variables can affect the market and cause the price of a cryptocurrency to rise or fall. Traders use different strategies and tools to try to anticipate when markets will move and how far. And while no single strategy may suffice on its own, using several – or all – can help you make better-informed decisions.
Stay in the know
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