China Plans to Introduce New Crypto to Rival Bitcoin Say’s Analyst

China Plans to Introduce New Crypto to Rival Bitcoin, Say’s Analyst

An influential officer of the PBoC at the meeting of China finance 40 groups had declared China’s intention to introduce a sovereign crypto asset. The declaration of this proposed introduction is unexpected at this time due to the ongoing currency war and trade dispute with the U.S.

 

China’s Progressive Crypto Route

Mu Changchun, the deputy director in the payment and settlement division at the PBoC had declared during the meeting with bankers that the prototype for the unspecified project is ready to be adopted. This declaration was reported by the local news media of Shangai securities during the weekend. The deputy director further discussed the digital asset intricacies. He added that blockchain features are noticeable in its product but not developed around decentralized ledgers because the retailers and banks use high-bandwidth and speed in China. As it is, the use of a reserve model by the PBoC similar to Circles USDC or a digital fiat model is not certain.

As for the cryptocurrency, it is intended to function in two ways. The upper layer will be operated by PBoC and the lower level will be operated by the retail banks. Changchun had explained that the operational splitting into two segments is to make the project function positively in a complex and massive economy in China.

How this will function was not explained, however, the assumption is that the split structure will function similar to the present double segment structure like that of the present division among Central banks and banks. To further make clear, the PBoC releases the currency and manages high-level payments while the retail banks operate on the adoption and utilization of the cryptos.

As of now, the deputy director Changchun asserts that the crypto is best utilized for “smaller-unit retail high-frequency trade dealings”.

 

China Crypto May Pose a Challenge to Bitcoin

As a result of the introduction of Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) coming into the space of international finance, discussions centered on the scenario mostly from analysts and economists are dominating the news in the crypto sphere.

A new york University Professor and economist knew for his negative bias towards Bitcoin recently declared in his publication late last year, titled Column for Project Syndicate that the introduction of CBDC’s to the digital sphere will “shut the avenue for Crypto-scammers”.

Probably, most digital payments systems may be changed by the “CBDCs”. Roubini stated by making clear that different to traditional retail banks and websites like Paypal, having high transaction fees, failed transactions and high resistance to free use, the Central banks offer a cost-effective and efficient approach at intermediating and lending money.

Roubini explained that giving access to any person to make payments using the central bank’s platforms, “CBDCs process will automate the structure, easing the requests for money, default banking accounts, and also a digital form of money services”.

In this scenario, the conclusion reached by the economist was declared as having CBDCs replace cryptocurrencies, with Bitcoin included, as offering an alternative to low-cost security and decentralized coins by the simplicity of central banking application.

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

EU Antitrust Regulators Scrutinise Facebook’s Cryptocurrency Project

EU Antitrust Regulators Scrutinise Facebook’s “Cryptocurrency” Project

Facebook’s Libra project has been questioned by European Union anti-trust regulators. They are concerned about the project, popularly referred to as a cryptocurrency, restricting competition.

Libra has been subject to immense scrutiny already from global policy and law makers. In fact, the company recently admitted that the regulatory pressure might force it to postpone or even cancel the project altogether.

Facebook’s “Cryptocurrency” Ambitions Draw Yet More Regulatory Attention

Almost as soon as the social networking giant Facebook announced its plans to move into the cryptocurrency space with Libra, the idea was met with hostility from global regulators.

Policy makers from France, the EU, the US, and elsewhere cited a hefty list of concerns about the cryptocurrency-like project. Even United States President Donald Trump weighed in on the subject, stating that the company would have to apply for licences if it wanted to offer banking services, just like any other financial institution does. He also stated that Libra would never pose a challenge to the might of the US dollar:

According to a report today in Bloomberg Law, the list of regulators with doubts about the firm’s cryptocurrency ambitions continues to grow. It states that antitrust regulators in the EU are concerned that the digital currency may stifle competition. The report cites a “document seen by Bloomberg” as evidence.

The document appears to be a questionnaire that has been sent to groups associated with Libra at this early stage of its development. Such a document is a standard part of enquiries made by the European Commission.

The questionnaire seeks to measure how the Libra cryptocurrency-like system may shutout rivals. The European Commission antitrust regulators believe that the integration of the digital currency with applications such as WhatsApp and Messenger could make it all but impossible for competing systems to find traction in the market.

The ever-growing list of regulatory concerns against Libra could well jeopardise the project’s proposed 2020 launch date. In fact, in a document submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the company admitted that the scrutiny might force the California-based social media company to discard the cryptocurrency-like project altogether.

Despite the fact that Libra is being touted as a cryptocurrency, most Bitcoin proponents do not see it as competition. Libra will not be priced by market forces like Bitcoin is. Rather, it will be backed by a basket of national currencies. It therefore does not represent the same robust monetary policy that has made BTC a favourite of economists from the Austrian school of thought.

 

Rick D.

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

The hidden costs of Bitcoin mining

The hidden costs of Bitcoin mining

Since 2009, Bitcoin mining has grown into a massive operation involving data centres packed with computer processors and racking up massive electric bills

Argo Blockchain – The hidden costs of Bitcoin mining

Bitcoin mining uses powerful computer processors

Mining Bitcoin is an expensive business, mainly due to the extremely large electricity bill the process can ramp up and the pricey hardware involved.

Bitcoin mining works by using powerful computers (known as nodes) to validate transactions by solving complex mathematical puzzles to find a solution that matches a specific number provided by a grouping, or ‘block’, of transactions which are then linked with other solved blocks to form a block-chain.

However, this isn’t as easy as it sounds as the number can be anything between 0 and 4,294,967,296 and cannot be predicted, so computers must keep guessing at random until they get lucky; the more processing power a node has, the luckier it will be against its competitors.

Once a node guesses the correct number, it is rewarded with 12.5 Bitcoins, currently worth around US$133,425, although this reward halves every four years or so.

While the rewards for mining Bitcoin can be great, the demand for computing power has led to the rise of massive mining nodes made up of dozens of processors that perform trillions of calculations to try to mine as much as possible.

All of this has led to a dramatic spike in the global power supply used to mine Bitcoin, which as of 19 August was estimated at a minimum of around 44 terawatt-hours (TWh) per year, according to tech trends site Digiconomist.

That’s more than the entire annual 2018 power consumption of New Zealand being dedicated to creating a currency that doesn’t physically exist.

 

Ballooning processor costs

Aside from the massive electricity bill, serious Bitcoin miners also have to contend with the costs of computer processors required to perform the required calculations.

When Bitcoin first appeared on the scene back in 2009, mining the crypto-currency was relatively simple due to the small pool of users who knew about it and were using their PC CPUs (essentially the computer’s brain) to perform the calculations necessary.

However, as Bitcoin’s popularity grew, more powerful processors were needed to compete with the influx of new users, and mining progressed to the use of graphics processing units (GPUs), which were equivalent to the power of around 30 CPUs, before then moving to FPGAs, essentially a GPU that runs three to 100 times faster, and finally application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), pieces of hardware designed solely to mine Bitcoin.

ASICs are now the standard for Bitcoin miners and their costs reflect it, with an Antminer S17, the flagship ASIC from Bitmain, the world’s leading Bitcoin mining hardware manufacturer, retailing at around US$2,700 a pop.

For comparison purposes, a top of the range CPU will usually set you back around US$50-US$300.

 

Case study

On a corporate level, it is possible to extrapolate many of the costs of running a large Bitcoin mining operation by looking at Argo Blockchain PLC (LON:ARB), an-enterprise scale crypto miner listed on the main board of the LSE.

As of 4 July, Argo currently operates 7,025 Bitcoin mining machines from a data centre in the Canadian province of Quebec.

Assuming these machines are all Antminer S17’s, Argo’s existing operation is worth around US$19mln, while also consuming around US$29,741 a day in electricity costs based on Quebec’s electricity prices.

If the operation runs 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, that’s US$10.8mln a year in power costs alone.

This is only set to increase further, with Argo expecting another 7,000 mining machines to be installed and in production by the end of 2019.

 

Big Tech needs big power

The seemingly endless hunger of Bitcoin miners for electricity sounds like it would make any environmentalist recoil in terror, and they may have reason to as there are competing reports as to how much carbon dioxide is produced by the global Bitcoin machine despite assertions that most of the power used comes from renewable sources.

A report in May 2019 from cryptocurrency asset manager CoinShares estimated that the global Bitcoin mining network drew around 74% of its power from renewable sources, although a contrasting report in June from journal Joule estimated the network contributed around 22mln tonnes of CO2 each year, around the same amount as Morocco.

However, despite Bitcoin’s massive appetite for electricity, it isn’t the only big tech enterprise straining the world’s energy grid.

Search engine giant Google, owned by parent Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG), consumed 8 TWh in 2017 alone, while fellow tech behemoth Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) consumed 3.4 TWh in 2017.

That’s around a quarter of Bitcoin’s annual energy consumption used by only two companies, with other computing heavyweights such as Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Microsoft Inc (NASDAQ:MSFT) likely to push the total for 'Big Tech' up even further as the move toward remote, ‘cloud-based’ data centres and huge server farms become a bigger part of modern computing.

If data centres full of social media photos and cat videos begin sapping the electricity grids, Bitcoin mining will probably be the least of the world’s problems.

This in my opinion is call for thuoght. Technology could start to be blamed for Global Warning,

what do you think ? Please comment below

 

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

THE BITCOIN SKEPTIC – BITCOIN ISN’T A HEDGE FOR ANYTHING

THE BITCOIN SKEPTIC – BITCOIN ISN’T A HEDGE FOR ANYTHING

WHAT IS A HEDGE? IT SURE AIN'T BITCOIN!

A “hedge” is an investment made to offset some form of risk. It can take many forms.

An investor may purchase put options on the stock market that will increase in value if the stock market falls. Perhaps a company will open a factory overseas that it exports products to in order to hedge against currency risk.

So the key to a hedge is that it, as an investment, offsets risk in another investment.

Risk is measured by volatility. The higher the volatility of a security, the riskier it is.

HOW TO MEASURE RISK

Volatility is measured by standard deviation.

To provide a baseline, the five-year standard deviation for the S&P 500 is 12. That means the S&P has a 95% likelihood of moving in a range of -24% to +24% in any given year.

Now let’s look at one of most volatile securities there is in the securities markets: crude oil. The five-year standard deviation for the United States Oil Fund ETF is 28.

Bitcoin is more volatile and riskier than this, but it gets worse.

Now let’s look at a 3x leveraged oil fund ETF, one designed to provide triple the returns of crude oil. The five-year standard deviation for the ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Crude Oil ETF is 54.

The five-year standard deviation for the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ETF is 85. That means the average annual return of this ETF could swing 170 percent in either direction in any given year. That means, yes, it could go to zero.

That’s right. Bitcoin is 60 percent more volatile than even a 3x leveraged version of the most volatile security out there.

THIS "HEDGE" DOESN'T REDUCE ANYTHING

So how on earth could it be a hedge against anything?

Ed Butowsky, Managing Partner at Chapwood Capital Investment Management, tells CCN:

“Bitcoin is literally the riskiest tradeable asset right now, and I wouldn’t even call it an asset. It is literally backed by nothing and based entirely on speculation. That’s why it is so volatile. It's a sucker's bet, not a hedge”

Butowsky also points out that no other chart of any security anywhere correlates, either positively or negatively, to any other asset. Any expert who says otherwise is "dead wrong" – like this guy:

 

or those who say that makes it a perfect non-correlated asset to the stock market, the idea of a hedge is – once again – to offset risk.

Bitcoin only increases the overall risk in a portfolio.

 

By Lawrence Meyers 19/08/2019

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

IRS Sends New Tax Warning to Crypto Users

IRS Sends New Tax Warning to Crypto Users

The U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is renewing its crackdown on the crypto industry. According to a recent report from CoinDesk, the American tax agency is sending yet another round of letters to individuals it believes is involved in the trading of Bitcoin and other digital assets. This time, those targeted as those that the IRS claims may be misreporting the income gained from trading on exchanges.

This comes shortly after reports arose that the agency targeted users of Coinbase for potentially incorrectly filing their crypto-related taxes.

This latest letter is, according to crypto tax software startup CoinTracker co-founder Chandan Lodha, different than the previous case. He told CoinDesk:

“Basically what it says is ‘hey we have a report from one of the financial institutions you use and the amount they reported to us the IRS is different than the amount you, the taxpayer, reported and this is the amount you owe’ and it’s a 30-day letter meaning you have to respond in 30 days.”

He went on to advise those that have received this letter to respond, even if the recipient or their account doesn’t believe what was accessed.

These recent warnings seem to be a part of the agency’s plan to crack down on the crypto industry. You see, unlike the United States Dollar or the Euro, Bitcoin is a non-sovereign form of money, as are a number of other digital assets. At least currently, that means there are no “banks of Bitcoin”, no taxes that you have to pay in it, or governmental agencies directly overseeing it.

Due to simple politics, this is obviously something that governments across the globe, especially their finance regulation arms, aren’t entirely amicable with. Because you know what they say, “follow the money”.

Thus, the IRS has been renewing its efforts to catch evaders dealing with this asset class. According to an IRS slide deck leaked online earlier this year, the tax authority intends to allow its agents to use a number of techniques and tactics to target evaders. These techniques include interviews, “open-source searches”, electronic surveillance, social media scrutiny, and Grand Jury subpoenas.

 

By Nick Chong August 18, 2019

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Daily confluence detector shows med-strong resistance levels till 10750

Daily confluence detector shows med-strong resistance levels till $10,750

 

BTC/USD has had a bullish start to the day as the price has gone up to $10,365.

Price is supported by a strong support level at $10,070.

BTC/USD is on the verge of having three bullish days in a row. Unlike the rest of the crypto market, Bitcoin seems to be creeping along in a bullish trajectory, probably buoyed by the news of the Bakkt announcement. The hourly price chart shows that the price fell to $9,885, where it found support and went up to $10,470. That was when it met resistance and then dropped to $10,365.

BTC/USD daily confluence detector

Daily confluence detector shows med-strong resistance levels till $10,750

The two resistance levels of note are at $10,550 and $10,670. $10,550 has the 4-hour previous high, 200-day simple moving average (SMA 200) and 1-day previous high. $10,670 has the 1-month Fibonacci 38.2% retracement level.

On the downside, there are two support levels at 10,275 and $10,070. $10,275 has the 1-week Fibonacci 38.2% retracement level and 4-hour previous low. The strongest support level is at $10,070, which has the 1-day Fibonacci 61.8% retracement level and 1-month Fibonacci 23.6% retracement level.

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

BITCOIN COULD BREAK THROUGH TO A NEW HIGH IN 2019 PREDICTS TOM LEE

BITCOIN COULD BREAK THROUGH TO A NEW HIGH IN 2019, PREDICTS TOM LEE

A debate has been raging about whether or not bitcoin should be deemed a safe-haven asset. After all, the leading cryptocurrency sure wasn't behaving like one and investors sure weren't doing a flight to safety in crypto while the equity markets were getting hammered this week. Even now, bitcoin is quietly holding onto $10,000 but not before having dipped below that key level in recent days.

Bitcoin bull and Fundstrat Co-Founder Thomas Lee is not the least bit spooked that investors didn't flock to bitcoin while the stock market – rightfully or wrongfully – signaled a recession. Lee told Fox Business that bitcoin, in fact, is a safe-haven asset, pointing to the premium price paid for the leading cryptocurrency in "markets that are in turmoil." Indeed, a Bloomberg report recently revealed that the bitcoin price was fetching premiums of 10 percent and 4 percent in Argentina and Hong Kong, respectively.

Defenders of bitcoin as a safe haven make the argument that you have look at the longer-term picture rather than the day-to-day action in the price. Fundstrat's Lee, for example, notes that BTC has more than tripled since year-end 2018. Its uncorrelation to stocks and bonds makes it a good "diversification hedge." Lee is also the one to recently remind us that BTC $10,000 is the FOMO level, but institutional investors seemingly have yet to come off of the sidelines.

Nonetheless, something about including "safe haven" and "bitcoin" in the same sentence seems off, given the unpredictable if not defiant nature in which the leading cryptocurrency trades. 2018 isn't too far in the rearview mirror, after all. Besides, why else would crypto asset managers advise such a small allocation to BTC vs. other asset classes? A rare opportunity – definitely. But safe is a little tougher to swallow. This vintage 1999 Jeff Bezos/Amazon.com video that has gone viral on Reddit reminds us of the nascent days of the internet that are comparable to where crypto is today.

BITCOIN TO THE MOON

Fundstrat's Lee is not out of the bitcoin price prediction business. After last year's bullish call for BTC $25,000 didn't work out, Lee backed off from making price forecasts for a while. With the wind seemingly at its back, bitcoin could make a strong finish in 2019 similar to its record display in 2017, and Lee doesn't want to miss out. He tells Fox Business host Stuart Varney:
 

"I think it's going to be much higher by the end of the year and potentially at new all-time highs. I think anyone who wants to have a 2 percent or 1 percent allocation to bitcoin as a hedge against a lot of things that could go wrong it's a smart bet."

By Gerelyn Terzo 15/08/2019

 

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Bitcoin’s Surging Dominance Is This Time Really Different?

Bitcoin’s Surging Dominance – Is This Time Really Different?

You may have heard some rumblings recently about the bitcoin dominance rate. This measures the weight of bitcoin in the crypto universe, by taking its market cap as a percentage of the total market cap for all crypto assets. Traders and investors keep an eye on it as an indicator of market preference.

It should surprise no-one that bitcoin is the dominant crypto asset, given its long track record and mainstream media attention. What is setting off alarms is its recent ascent: it is now hovering around 70 percent, a level not seen since April 2017, just before the previous bull market took off.

Some speculate that this means another bull run is imminent, one that will push bitcoin’s dominance to above 90 percent and effectively kill off any alternative crypto asset’s hopes of capturing significant market share.

Others see it as a sign that alternative crypto assets are on the verge of a recovery as investors pivot in search of outperformance.

As with any data point, there is much open to interpretation. Chart analysis aside, market metrics are rarely useful in isolation, and to get a feel for what the bitcoin dominance rate is telling us, we need a deeper understanding of what it represents – and why a rising number is not necessarily good news.

So what?

Why is the bitcoin dominance rate worth paying attention to? Surely everyone knows bitcoin is the leader?

Because it’s a relative measure that points to preference, conviction and momentum.

Price measures bitcoin’s popularity. Dominance measures its popularity relative to other crypto assets. In theory this could mean a “flight to quality” as investors get spooked by market risk and switch out of smaller cap tokens into a “safer” asset. Or, it could represent growing interest in the sector as a whole, along with conviction that bitcoin has the strongest fundamentals.

Either way, it highlights that, of all crypto assets, bitcoin is the most attractive from an investor’s viewpoint. (It’s important to note that dominance can increase as the price goes down, and decrease as the price goes up – it’s a relative, not absolute, measure.)

This matters for several reasons, one of which is what it says about market sentiment. While bitcoin is a speculative asset, it can be considered less speculative than smaller cap tokens, given its relative liquidity, history and network size. Its growing dominance points to a focus on fundamentals and on relative “safety,” which depicts a more grounded level of investor participation than in the ICO-fueled boom of 2017.

While not necessarily predictive, sentiment indicators tend to be recursive – you can’t be sure the trend will continue, let alone with what energy, but positive sentiment generally has in-built inertia. If traders choose to buy based on these indicators, they reinforce them, which encourages more traders to buy, and so on.

Another important consequence is market confidence, especially at the early stages of institutional involvement.

Large traditional funds are not, on the whole, particularly concerned with the relative merits of one token versus another. They are more likely to be evaluating whether to invest in crypto or some other speculative asset class as part of their portfolio diversification. For most, if they choose to invest in the sector, bitcoin is the only viable option: it’s the only one that 1) has sufficient liquidity to absorb a small- to medium-sized allocation; 2) has a lively derivatives market; 3) can count on a wide range of on-ramps and 4) is definitely not an unregistered security in most jurisdictions.

The protagonist role of bitcoin is likely to increase the confidence of traditional investors in the sector overall, burnishing its reputation and making their decision easier. In the absence of concrete valuations (difficult with bitcoin using traditional methods, since it has no cash flows), sentiment is usually as good a market indicator as any.

Now what?

No trend continues forever, though.

Previous run-ups in the dominance factor have been met with a correction as investor attention pivots and new alternatives come into play. In spite of momentum, in virtually all asset classes there comes a reckoning, in which market leaders become overvalued relative to the runners-up, and knowledgeable investors take profits in order to re-invest in more attractive opportunities.

But this is unlikely to happen in the short term, even though the last bull market saw bitcoin’s dominance drop from over 85 percent to below 40 percent. This time it is different.

Why? Last time the latter stage of the bull market was largely driven by the hyped potential of initial coin offerings, many of which promised revolution and riches based on marketing documents masquerading as white papers. The retail market poured into speculative tokens, which ramped up their value relative to the more “boring” bitcoin – at one stage, it looked like ether was going to push bitcoin off its market leader pedestal.

Recent market activity, however, has felt much more subdued (in spite of occasional shenanigans), largely due to increased regulatory scrutiny. The “sobering up” of the bear market, during which lawmakers and enforcers got to grips with the potential and threat of this new asset class, entrenched more rigorous standards for token issuers, promoters and investors. Many of the tokens issued in 2017 are now defunct, and while other interesting opportunities have emerged, the flow is more careful and calculated.

What’s more, the expected role of institutional investors in the next bull run, with their focus on bitcoin as the representative crypto asset, is likely to push bitcoin’s dominance up even further.

Then what?

What will it take for that to change?

All trends do eventually tire, to be replaced by new, more energetic ones. The same will happen with bitcoin. Once bitcoin investment by institutions is not such a novelty, and once deeper liquidity has dampened volatility, aggressive managers eager to beat their peers’ performance are going to start thinking about where to find alpha.

That’s when they start to look at other assets. They may rotate out of bitcoin into more overlooked alternatives; or they may put in fresh money. Either way, the relative weighting of other crypto assets will increase.

This is unlikely to happen any time soon, though.

Institutional involvement is just getting started and has a long way to run. Current currency turmoil and macro uncertainty may accelerate this, but a more likely scenario is that the bulk of institutional money, which tends to be relatively conservative, will wait for signs of further momentum before risking their reputations and returns.

The risk

Meanwhile, growing bitcoin dominance presents a risk we should not overlook: that bitcoin becomes firmly entrenched as the go-to crypto asset for the bulk of crypto investment, to the extent that it smothers interest in other ideas.

This would not be good for the sector, for two main reasons.

One, it would suck funding out of other areas of the market and stifle development of blockchain applications. Blockchain technology’s potential goes beyond bitcoin; it presents the opportunity to re-think how business models work, how assets can be valued and how income and capital can be distributed in a more decentralized economy. Other crypto assets are manifestations of this potential, and should be able to approach the market for funding and validation.

Two, concentration is a sign of an immature asset class. Imagine an emerging stock market in which one company accounts for 80 percent of the country’s market valuation. A diversified category will be more resilient, flexible and powerful, as internal connections and synergies empower a profitable irrigation of resources.

We are entering a phase where more attention will be paid to the dominance metric, which is likely to continue creeping up for some time. Some analysts are suggesting alternative calculations, taking out “fake volumes” and even stablecoins (since they are not seen as a competing investment vehicle) – a re-adjusted figure could be as high as 90 percent.

Could we get to a “tipping point” beyond which diverting attention from bitcoin will be extremely difficult?

It’s possible, but unlikely. People generally want to differentiate themselves from others; that also applies to their investment portfolios. Not only will investments in not-so-high-profile tokens better reflect retail investors’ personal preferences; but professional competition will also encourage crypto diversification in a search for outperformance.

Bitcoin’s dominance will probably continue to be unassailable for at least a few more cycles, though, and the inflow of funds, even if concentrated, will help the market infrastructure continue to mature. But, in the end, creativity and innovation always find a way to manifest.

Meanwhile, we should celebrate that bitcoin has not only survived but thrived. Its growing dominance and rising liquidity are signs that a greater number of investors believe in its potential. However, as exciting as that may be, it’s not the only thing going on.

As investors, we also need to keep an eye on what’s happening out of the limelight; from there will emerge the interesting opportunities of tomorrow.

 

 

Noelle Acheson

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Bitcoin Drops the Key 11000 Level

Bitcoin Drops the Key $11,000 Level

The sellers are starting to pile back into Bitcoin as the key $11,000 level has fallen away.

The news out today is that major bank Barlclay’s has dumped its relationship with Coinbase, a leading crypto exchange.

For some background here, the major banks are not all that keen to work with crypto exchanges etc. The relationship with Barclay’s, a major London player, was clearly a positive one in terms of market sentiment. The fact that the relationship has soured is now starting to weigh on price.

BTC has today dropped the key $11,000 level and it looks like the slide is starting to gain some more steam.

Technically speaking, we’ve seen price fail a number of times at the $12,000 level. In fact, I suggested that if price couldn’t retest $12,000 then it would have been a lower high, which was spelling rouble. Sure enough, price has slid way from that point after it only made it as high as $11,500 on the first bounce.

There were also numerous attempts at $12,000 and price simply couldn’t breakthrough. So now the door is open for more downside.

The obvious level is now $10,000. That is a big round number level and a big psychological one at that. I wouldn’t be surprised to see a fall through that level and a tag of either $9,500 or even as far as $9,000.

While this news is not earth-shattering, the technicals are the one that is pointing to the selling for me. The fact that price couldn’t break higher, means the bears remain in control and really we just haven’t got a fresh catalyst to see this one push higher just at the moment.

There was some safe-haven appeal last week and that has worn off a bit in the last 24 hours in other assets like GOLD so we should expect more downside here today.

 

Posted Wednesday, August 14, 2019 by Rowan Crosby

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Bitcoin Mining Industry Remains on Strong Footing

Bitcoin Mining Industry Remains on Strong Footing

When the crypto winter struck the market in 2018, analysts predicted that crypto mining would also see a downturn. Some miners did hang their boots in the aftermath of the Bitcoin crash. However, one year down the line, Bitcoin mining is growing stronger than ever
 

Bitcoin mining- the industry most ignore

Bitcoin mining is becoming more profitable, thanks to the recent rise in prices and the rise of Bitcoin mining pools. In the early days of the coin, mining could be done by an individual using their CPU, but now, large Bitcoin mining pools are using advanced ASICs designed for mining to maximize profits. Back in December 2009, Satoshi Nakamoto commented that he would want the community members to stop the GPU arms race and said, “It’s nice how anyone with just a CPU can compete fairly equally right now.” Fast forward 10 years and the Bitcoin hashrate is now dominated by large mining pools.

Currently, the biggest chunk of Bitcoin mining is attributed to BTC.com, which controls over 20.1% of the mining power. F2Pool controls 14% hashrate, Antpool controls 11.1% and Poolin controls 10.9%. SlushPool is another dominant pool with 8.7% hashrate with ViaBTC, BTC.TOP, BitFury, etc. contributing the rest.
 

In the case of Bitcoin Cash, the hashrate is distributed much less evenly with BTC.com dominating 26.7%, Pooling and AntPool controlling 8.5% each and Bitcoin.com controlling 6.6%.
 

How do miners stay profitable?

In December 2018, after Bitcoin prices suffered constant downturns, only five mining rigs were profitable. The reason behind their success could be lower electricity costs (the biggest expense for miners), at 13 cents per kWh. As of August 2019, over 40 mining devices were profitable at the same electricity prices. The top performer was Microbt Whatsminer, followed by three models by the largest Bitcoin mining company Bitmain. The Whatsminer is profiting by $10.49, and Bitmain’s three new Antminer S17 series miners can easily go to $9 per day.

 

However, Bitmain still remains the top mining firm followed by Canaan, Ebang, Innosilicon, Strongu, and Microbt. Bitmain is now considering a public listing on a US stock exchange owing to the massive profits that its business generates. Thanks to mining, the semiconductor industry is also getting a heads up. The International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors and the 7 nanometers (7nm) node design is now a reality. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) recently received an order for 30,000 7nm chipsets from Bitmain which further confirms that Bitcoin mining isn’t slowing anytime soon.

 

 

Viraj Shah by Viraj Shah August 12, 2019

David Ogden – Http://markethive.com/david-ogden