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đ° Monday mood
Market madness arrives just in time for summer
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đ Not over until it is
The trouble with markets is that you never quite know when theyâve peaked.
Itâs all so easy in retrospect. Looking back, bitcoinâs all-time high in December 2017 was clearly the top for the next three years, even if altcoins continued to rally for another few weeks.
And in March 2021, when bitcoin cleared $61,000 for the first time, it wasnât set in stone that bitcoin would smash that by another 13% by November â only eight months later â after retracing by nearly half.
At some point, it became obvious that the bull market had run its course. Bears may have called it earlier than the bulls, but either way, the Terra implosion in the following May, and the cascading liquidations and bankruptcies that followed were really the nails.
For all we know, bitcoinâs all-time high of nearly $73,740 in March was the peak of our current cycle. That would mean the bull market is over.
It certainly feels like that today, with practically everything except stablecoins in the red. Hereâs what the market looks like compared to previous years.
This chart plots bull markets against each other. So far, so good
When it comes to prices, all we can really do is look backward. Itâs been 585 days (~20 months) since bitcoin bottomed out in November 2022, which for convenienceâs sake, weâll call the start of our current bull market.
Using that very basic definition, the previous two bull markets hit their peaks after ~840 and 1,060 days. So, if weâre destined to repeat those periods â a big if â then weâre solidly in the second half of our cycle.
Bitcoin had, at this point, gone 6x and 3x in the past two seasons. Bitcoin has so far gone 4x, even after the recent dip, placing it in the middle of its most recent bull markets.
Thatâs if bitcoin is still in a bull market. If bitcoin actually topped out in March, then this wouldâve been the shortest bull cycle on record, not counting its first year of price discovery
A short bull market would be unusual but not impossible
It goes without saying, but if you believe in big fractal energy, all this makes the next few months totally decisive for bitcoinâs price.
In the past two bull markets, most of bitcoinâs gains occurred over the following 200 days, going as much as 20x and 100x on their respective bottoms.
We know that returns are diminishing every cycle â so whatever bitcoin does from here may not be quite as explosive. That might have crypto investors itching for big profits elsewhere. Historically, altcoin seasons have helped bridge the gap.
But as is now well-documented, there has been no altcoin season so far this cycle, at least not in the same sense as previous periods.
Building on the definition outlined in a past edition of this column, there have been three distinct altcoin seasons over the past seven years. Two coincided with bitcoin halvings, with each of those running for around a year and a half and finishing up when BTC topped out.
Bitcoin halvings are marked with dotted lines and altcoin seasons by blue
A smaller altcoin season ran for almost seven months from the end of 2018 and halfway through the following year.
Altcoin season either could be late â or just not coming â depending on how bullish or bearish you are.
Either way, this bull market has turned out very different from the others so far. Letâs hope it's not too different and thereâs still more room to run.
â David Canellis
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Stellar Networkâs Smart Contract Platform Provides a Scalable Path to Provide DeFi to the Unbanked
BTC and ETH are down 5% over the past day, sitting at $61,100 and $3,310 respectively.
ORDI, NOT and BRETT are the hardest hit, each losing 10%, followed closely by UNI.
There are 3,745 validators in the Ethereum queue right now, while thereâs only one in the exit queue.
DEX weekly volumes have fallen 10% to $35.4 billion but are still up year to date.
Ethereum and Polygon weekly NFT volumes are up 16%, reaching $38.9 million and $18.2 million respectively. Bitcoin NFT volume dropped 30% to $16.8 million.
đ¶ Dog days of summer
Whatâs the vibe?
I posed the question to Hashkey OTCâs head of trading, Mark Wong, to see what traders are watching as the pullback continues.
Obviously, thereâs been a sea of red out there, and thatâs become a focal point for Wong.
âWhatâs interesting is that thereâs been no significant technology as of yet to build a catalyst. We do feel that sentiment has been basically revolving around most of the same players,â he told me.
I donât think I have to explain that bitcoin ETFs sucked the air out of the room for months. Theyâve also added to the so-called vibe â or at least did â earlier this year. Weâll have to see if that momentum can continue.
But weâve spent enough time chatting about the ETFs, so letâs talk about some other things, like memecoinsâŠ
âI think memecoins have resulted in quite a decent amount of dilution of value all around in terms, but there will be some that are there to stay,â Wong said. The ones that build a good community and also provide âsignificant entertainment valueâ are the ones that show the most promise for a long, lasting run.
Whether Iggy Azaleaâs $MOTHER will join the ranks of Dogecoin isnât yet clear though.
Ah, itâs Monday morning and weâve already chatted about memecoins and bitcoin ETFs, all in one go. Still with me?
Letâs zoom out. Wong thinks weâre in the âeye of the stormâ right now, and that this isnât exactly the start of a more volatile period despite bitcoin losing momentum over the weekend and tumbling to $61,000.
To be fair, we hadnât seen that leg down when I sat down with Wong. But we did discuss whether bitcoin and ETH were maturing this cycle and how that might impact volatility.
Wongâs currently seeing some profit-taking from early bitcoin adopters but also buying interest from institutions, such as family offices and asset managers. Outside of bitcoin, heâs noticed a trend buying into thematic coins, including real-world assets and DePIN.
âAll around, I believe that the volatility may not have begun yet,â he added. âWe havenât quite seen the 2021 levels of excitement.â
Maybe thatâs par for the course. And, stop me if youâve heard this before, but weâre in the throes of summer at this point. Wong pointed out that the classic Wall Street saying, âsell in May and go away,â may really be relevant right now.
âI think bitcoin does show better performance within the fourth quarter, so the market may be looking forward to that,â he told me.
His view is in line with others, as weâve previously discussed. Despite the lower levels, Iâm told thereâs still a pathway to bitcoin near or at $100,000 by the end of the year.
While the vibes are bearish right now, it may just be cyclical.
Keep calm and crypto on, I guess, as we await more catalysts. Better just try to ride out the summer.
â Katherine Ross
The Mt Gox estate said repayments will begin in July.
Over the weekend, a video clip circulated of Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood saying that sheâd vote for Trump, though content creator Kevin Paffrath has since deleted the video.
CoinStats âtemporarilyâ shut down its app after 1,590 wallets were drained in a hack.
A Nomura survey focused on Japanese institutional investors found that 54% plan to invest in crypto within the next three years.
A slew of updated registration statements from potential spot ether ETF issuers disclosed seed funding and fees late Friday.
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From modularity to restaking, to the intersection of AI and crypto, to the long-awaited consumer-facing apps to the most recent Bitcoin-related innovations.
Weâll be breaking down all of these and more with the help of a few of the thought leaders in crypto at Permissionless.
Q: What can we do when markets turn red that isnât bearposting or doomscrolling?
Tanking prices can really complicate things for the avid crypto user. Perhaps there are times when users may find themselves holding more stablecoins than they otherwise would.
In those cases, finding the most trustless ways to farm yield on stablecoin balances could make for a fun hobby that still satisfies the number-go-up urge. At least itâs more relaxing than catching falling knives, if you donât count the paranoia that comes with DeFi.
Though this isnât investment advice (and you should never do something just because you read it in a newsletter). Otherwise, market corrections are historically great times to start dabbling in non-financial crypto apps, like gaming and social media.
Branch out. If bears are for building, then middle-to-late bull markets are for dabbling.
â David Canellis
Itâs such a cliche but no pain, no gain is applicable. And I know thatâs not ideal to hear after the last couple of years, but thatâs the way the cookieâs currently crumbling.
Instead â and I want to emphasize that this isnât investing advice â focus on the themes or narratives that can pave the way forward this cycle.
Focusing on negativity isnât going to change the outcome and, as someone who deals with diagnosed anxiety, itâll only wear on your mental health.
Donât let the doom and gloom suck you in. Keep digging into whatever interests you right now, and block out some of this more macro-based noise.
â Katherine Ross