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Archives for March 2020

Mar 15 2020

Et Tu, Crypto?

It’s March 15, 2020. I’m trying to answer a whole host of questions. Some are serious:

  • Are we going to stay away from this virus?
  • How will bloggers, writers, and entrepreneurs like me make a slowdown work financially?

Some are less than serious:

  • What is the best recipe for a “Quarantini?”

While everyone should take precaution during these times we do not recommend having a ‘Quarantini’ or any alcohol if you’re feeling under the weather.

If you’re feeling fine and of legal drinking age, a little extra Vitamin C consumption doesn’t hurt.

– Aviation Gin PR https://t.co/c97ZQaxJKV— Aviation American Gin (@AviationGin) March 13, 2020

  • And what about a “Cryptotini?”
Glass of mysterious alcohol, plus an orange peel, and some ice.
“Just throw some liquor, an orange, and few ice cubes in a glass…and hope for the best.”

But, in the spirit of this blog (“making sense of crypto” is kinda the mantra), the questions we’ll ask today — and attempt to answer — are all Bitcoin and crypto in nature. Here goes:

Have We Hit “Bitcoin Bottom?”

Price swings in Bitcoin from March 12.
It wasn’t THAT bad, was it?

Well, to answer the question in the caption, it WAS that bad. Like REALLY bad, actually. THAT IS A 43.3% DROP.

But to answer the bigger question…

Nobody knows. $4185.21 might appear to be a bottom — FOR NOW — because, as of this writing, we’re at $5373.35. We’re bouncing around in the $5100-$5500 range for the past day. There’s some stability. But there’s also that “flight to safety” question that we asked forever ago: Is Bitcoin Digital Gold? (And yeah, forever ago was two weeks back.)

Is What’s Happening Outside Really Impacting Crypto Prices?

One theory — not my theory, had been espoused elsewhere, most notably by vagabond entrepreneur and crisis investor Doug Casey — is that prices aren’t impacted by anything other than rogue traders (Chinese? North Koreans? Both?) who are dumping their ill-gotten gains for cash.

Another theory — probably works in parallel to the above — is that whales are using the drop to dump their Bitcoin and Ethereum on unsuspecting noobs. Then they’ll buy the same coins back at lower prices, with a plan to lather, rinse, and repeat as the days go by. (And as people get less and less certain of what’s to come.)

What’s a Crypto Investor — or ANY Investor — to Do?

Hey, here’s where we can go back to the basics. And these basics make sense for ANY investment — you are entering an uncertain time. You don’t know what will happen next, none of us do, and that’s okay. Consider the following as advice that is worth the paper it is printed on.

  1. Remain calm. It’s a dog-eat-dog world out there — and, if you’re Norm Peterson from Cheers, you’re wearing Milk-Bone underwear — and having a steady hand is going to help a ton.
  2. Assess where you are and where you’re going. Some may need money immediately and don’t have time to play the game of market timing (as has been said often, nobody rings a bell when you hit the bottom). Some may have a little extra to set aside for crypto projects. It all depends on where you plan on being in a month, in six months, in six years.
  3. And, if you can, play the long game. We wrote about that a while ago and we’re still there: playing the long game is going to get you farther than anything else.

Links to Help You…

These are of course AFFILIATE LINKS and if you use them to open an account and make a qualifying purchase, we’ll get a commission. But two long-game tools we’ve been using are…

  1. Coinbase. Dave’s Affiliate Link. They have recently started letting you make regular purchases to “dollar-cost average” your way into crypto. 50 bucks or so, a couple times a month might be all you need to get your feet wet.
  2. Crypto.com. Dave’s Affiliate Link. We have more in this account of late than in our Coinbase account, partly because of the nifty debit card option.

In any event — prices up, prices down, rock bottom, Moon, etc. — we’re here to help. Stay Sanitized.

Written by David Van de Walle · Categorized: Bitcoin, Coinbase, Crypto.com, Cryptotini, Ethereum · Tagged: calling the bottom, dollar cost averaging, investment

Mar 11 2020

Time for Discount Bitcoin

It’s been a long, long, LONG week on the financial markets. Coronavirus fears plus an oil price drop made for a one-two punch that has left quite a few people scratching their heads. Trading was halted for a bit, and the Dow dropped 2000-plus points. That was MONDAY…

Tuesday was meh and now Wednesday brings talks of a bear market having finally arrived. You name it, it’s in the red.

Look at these low prices!

Crypto people thought this could mean a flight to safety for BTC and other names in the space. Wrong. Bitcoin is really not digital gold (yet) and also doesn’t have a hundred-year track record of results.

SO…we thought we’d take a look at the year-to-date charts and try to get a handle on what the first ten weeks of the year — and what the coronavirus crisis — can tell us about what the heck is going on.

BTC has had a rocky year so far.

Headline 1: 11.5% Up from the Low

Okay, that’s one way of looking at it. Had you timed the market exactly right and bought at the low of $6994.28 AND held to today, you’d be up 11.5%.

The low wasn’t too far from the opening price in 2020: $7203, so an 8% gain if you bought on New Year’s Day. (Compare to a volatile stock, I guess.)

Headline 2: Had You Called the Top…

Let’s use the scenario above — you buy at the low because you are really really really smart and you “called the bottom” and “bought the dip” — to show you just how you could have done: a 48.7% gain!

Headline 3: What If You’re Bad at This?

Ah, let’s say you’re not so good at calling the market. You buy at the top and sell today because you think you’re calling a bottom.

You lose: to the tune of 33.4%.

HEADLINE 4: DON’T TIME THE MARKET

If there’s one thing that people who trade stocks for a living will tell you it’s this: “DON’T TIME THE MARKET.”

And if there’s one thing that we’ve told you here a few times, it’s this: “PLAY THE LONG GAME.”

Listen, We Don’t Have the Answers…

But — and we’re not financial advisors, do you your own research, etc., etc. — it probably makes sense right now to look at your own situation before doing anything rash like buying or selling tons of $BTC. Do you need the money for something else? What about your own long-term view? Do you feel like playing the market?

It’s a crazy world — made crazier by the fact that no one really knows what will happen to Bitcoin and crypto — so you’re best to stay grounded. Don’t watch too much news. And don’t go batty trying to time any market.

Written by David Van de Walle · Categorized: Bitcoin, HODL, Investing

Mar 01 2020

Flight to Safety? Not Exactly; Why Bitcoin and Crypto Didn’t Pop This Week

In the financial markets, the headlines this week were pretty grim. The Dow had one of its worst weeks ever, falling by 10.5 percent, or 2993.57 points.

Dow Performance Week of Feb 25
Not the greatest week for the Dow

100 percent of the drop was due to fears of the spread of the Coronavirus. Traders are still uncertain, especially after China’s economy slowed to a crawl, whether this means we’re looking at a really bad situation for the global economy, or a kinda bad situation for the global economy, or even whether this is just — and not to diminish the lives lost and the impact of this virus — a bad flu season.

Isn’t Gold a Flight to Safety?

That’s a good question — you would think that folks would run towards gold. Here’s a February chart from Kitco, though, that tells you that wasn’t the case this week.

Kitco Gold Chart for February

Gold is trading, according to Kitco, at $1585.50 — it appears to be right at where it was at the beginning of the month. Its week wasn’t as bad as the Dow’s week, but it was down around 5 percent. (Due to the vagaries of the precious metals markets — a London open, a New York close, and random differences between the two, we’ll just stick with around 5 percent.)

All of this leads us to the premise of this article:

If the Dow is down and gold is sorta down and sorta flat, shouldn’t the world be looking to Bitcoin and Crypto as “digital gold” in times of uncertainty?

A quick look at the week in BTC and you’d learn that wasn’t the case.

Feb 24 BTC Weekly Chart
Charts from Coinmarketcap.com; graphics added by Metacoin.co

That’s a drop of $1002.57. 10.27 percent. Dropping almost as much as the Dow. Dropping more than the price of gold.

We Posit a Guess or Two

To make sense of this, I reached out to one of the smartest people I know: crypto trader and developer Von, who we heard from in our post about Playing the Long Game. Here’s what he told me through a Twitter DM:

Traders’ tastes have changed with the advent of the Coronavirus. Traders and investors are looking for alternatives, shifting the demand curve to the left. The stock trader bought Bitcoin, the crypto trader bought gold. We will see an equilibrium soon; sudden changes in tastes globally have an instant impact.

Sounds sensible: if you watch the business channels like I do, you hear a lot about trying to call the bottom, a lot about making sure you look for buying opportunities, and a lot about having a long-term view. Very little about Bitcoin.

(Except Tim Draper, who was bullish as all get-out in a recent CNBC interview, calling for a $250,000 BTC price in 2023.)

My guess about all of this is a little bit of math and a little bit of guesswork.

The math comes from Jeremy Siegel, the Wharton School professor and pundit, who reminded folks again this week that just 10 percent of a stock’s price comes from its current earnings value — the rest is long-term enterprise value. (WHAT?)

I’ll explain as best I can: Siegel says stocks could weather a lost year — an entire year’s earnings could be wiped out from something like the coronavirus — and, if they are appropriately valued, you will be okay in the long-term. So if you have stock in a company like, for example, JP Morgan Chase, and there’s a lost year due to a protracted crisis from the virus, there’s still 90 percent of the value of the business in everything else.

(Apologies to Professor Siegel if I didn’t explain this correctly.)

Bitcoin — and the rest of crypto, but let’s just talk about Bitcoin here — does not have such a luxury baked into its price. AND it really can’t be compared to gold yet either. This gives us a really interesting pricing conundrum because…

  1. Bitcoin doesn’t have earnings or dividends or a board of directors
  2. Bitcoin doesn’t have thousands of years of history as a medium of exchange or a store of value
  3. Heck, Bitcoin doesn’t have quarterly earnings, and doesn’t have a memory of the 1929 Crash or the 1987 Crash or the 2008 Financial Crisis.

What Next?

This reporter — who is not a financial advisor and reminds you to do your own research — is dollar-cost-averaging. Sure, I’ll have an interest in long-term projects that could pay off, but for me it’s about ensuring that this is one of the hedges in my portfolio.

Because, really, there’s a decent amount of guesswork here.

Stay safe out there!

Written by David Van de Walle · Categorized: Bitcoin, DYOR

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