Home » New Musings » Market Musings Thurs 12 Nov 20: Bitcoin Breaks $16,000 Level: Breakout in ARB likely to follow

Market Musings Thurs 12 Nov 20: Bitcoin Breaks $16,000 Level: Breakout in ARB likely to follow

09:30 : Bitcoin Breaks $16,000 Level: Breakout in ARB likely to follow

Bitcoin has seen a huge resurgence in 2020  having crashed from the frothy heights of $20,000 in 2018 to lows below $3000 in 2019.  Its rise and fall is reminiscent of the hype cycle in new technologies where the promise  inflates expectations as "wildest dreams" scenarios are imagined  only to see them dashed as reality kicks-in and shortcomings become clear  ...there follows a slow recovery from a "trough of despair"  to a "slope of enlightenment" when the real-world potential become clearer as the technology is adopted in the mainstream. The psychographics of BTC adoption also parallel those of new technology where the mainstream laggards' continued scepticism become gradually eroded as adoption widens in the final plateau of productivity (or in this case, acceptability).

BTC's adoption by  PayPal in Oct '20 marked a significant milestone in the cryptocurrency becoming just currency:  its recognition as an asset by the likes of Tudor-Jones and more recently JP Morgan, who have recently established a crypto unit (see Oct 20, a spectacular volte-face from JPM's Dimon calling it a "fraud" in 2017) and the increasing exposure sought by large hedge funds and institutions  has further marked this coming-of-age.

The volatility in BTC has decreased markedly from those over-hyped days as many of the scam artists and shysters have moved on to other cons (the con with BTC being the "get rich" in minutes fantasy along with fictional ICOs - initial coin offerings that literally cashed in on the craze as well as good old-fashioned Ponzi schemes with  technological wrappers). There is no doubt that many will remain deeply skeptical of BTC as an "asset class" often referring to it as imaginary and without value: given the trillions printed in fiat currency this year, the principle difference between both "asset classes" is less the imaginary nature of the intrinsic value and more the basis of their supply and reserve: BTC is both finite in supply and increasingly difficult to mine (tied to a unmovable limit of  21 million BTCs minable) ; while fiat remains ostensibly infinite in supply and increasingly facile in generation. That argument doesn't extend to demand where the dynamics reverse

I don't trade BTC nonetheless but I have ,and do, trade Argo Blockchain  a tiny £21m market cap crypto miner  based in the UK. At pixel ARB's  price is 7.8p, apparently ignoring the significant breakout in BTC but does looks likely to follow and clear the recent 9p high. ARB has  completed a classic 8 EMA check-and-bounce pullback common in many accumulated shares . The chart below also shows volume accumulation on days when price increases but much lower volume on days when price decreases.

Assuming BTC holds these levels and closes above $16,000, ARB looks likely to follow (with caveats on increasing mining difficulty and relative hash rates as BTC price rises ). ARB's lacklustre price action is probably a function of its relative obscurity to UK investors and the  residual scepticism of BTC's merit which is more predominant in the UK than the US.

[stock_market_widget type="inline" template="generic" assets="ARB.L" markup="{name} ({symbol}) {price} ({change_pct}){last_update}" style="font-size:x-small" api="yf"]

 

 

Click to enlarge
Follow donncha:
Financial trader, technical analyst, author and blogger. Trading full time for 13 years.
Latest posts from
5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments