Nuclear Potential For Cryptocurrencies Escalates As Regulators Tip Their Hands

 | Oct 04, 2021 06:25

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Ray Dalio’s statement could be prophetic
  • Leading cryptos were leaning lower then rallied as October began
  • It’s all about flows for the short-term
  • Governments have shown their hand; an inconsistent approach from the SEC
  • Stops required as downside could get ugly

Cryptocurrencies have gripped the attention of many market participants. Nothing puts the spotlight on an asset like a rip-roaring bull market. Bitcoin’s explosive move from five cents in 2010 to a high of over $65,500 earlier this year has a magnetic impact on investment behavior. At over $48,500 at the end of last week, the token's appreciation stands as the most incredible investment story of our lifetime.

As a sign of the growth of speculative interest, the number of tokens in the cryptocurrency asset class has increased from one in 2010 to over 12,200 at the end of last week.

Bitcoin and blockchain—or blockchain and Bitcoin—reflect an evolutionary revolution in finance with substantial ramifications for economics and politics. I view Bitcoin and blockchain as a philosophical chicken and egg dilemma.

The only answer is possible from Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous person or group of persons that developed Bitcoin, authored the Bitcoin white paper, created and deployed Bitcoin’s original reference implementation, and devised the first blockchain database.

Blockchain has achieved almost universal acceptance as the technological evolution of finance, increasing transaction speeds and record-keeping efficiency. On the other hand, Bitcoin poses a threat to the status quo in global finance. Central banks, monetary authorities, and governments derive power from the military and control of the money supply. Wide acceptance of Bitcoin as a global means of exchange threatens the latter.

El Salvador made Bitcoin its national currency in early September, becoming the first country to reject the US dollar as the worldwide reserve currency. While other nations may follow, the powerful and wealthiest countries are not going to let Bitcoin and the other cryptocurrencies challenge their control of the world’s purse strings without an epic battle that starts on the regulatory front.

h2 Ray Dalio’s statement could be prophetic/h2

Ray Dalio is a successful hedge fund manager and billionaire. He is the founder of the world’s largest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates. In mid-September, Dalio told reporters at CNBC that if Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies gain mainstream success, regulators will take control of the market. He added:

I think at the end of the day if it’s really successful, they will kill it and they will try to kill it. And I think they will kill it because they have ways of killing it.

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Recent actions by regulators point to how prescient Dalio's words were as we see increasing regulation of the asset class.

h2 Leading cryptos were leaning lower then rallied As October began/h2

After reaching a high at $53,210 on Sept. 7, October Bitcoin futures put in a bearish reversal on the daily chart and made lower highs. However, the price action on Oct. 1 broke the short-term bearish pattern.