Amid the Fed-induced gloom and doom, some investors are betting that history will repeat itself with animal spirits returning to the bitcoin market in the lead up to and following the mining reward halving due in less than two years. However, observers suggest otherwise.
"BTC [at] $43,000 is pricey for a halving that's two years away, it's simple fundamentals let the price sink for a while," one market participant tweeted early this month, while another Twitter handle expressed excitement after noting bitcoin's record of charting meteoric rallies after reward halving.
To the uninitiated, bitcoin's mining reward halving is a programmed code to reduce the pace of supply expansion by 50% every four years. Essentially, the cryptocurrency's monetary policy is on a preset tightening path contradictory to the ever-increasing fiat money supply. That's one of the main reasons the crypto community considers bitcoin a digital gold and an alternative to the U.S. dollar. The impending halving in 2024 will reduce the per block reward from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.
Historically, the halving cycle has comprised a two-year recovery rally ahead of the event, followed by a year-long meteoric run and a 12-month bear market. If the past is a guide, 2021 was supposed to be a bullish year like 2017; bears are to control price action this year, paving the way for a recovery rally next year and a bull run after the 2024 halving.
However, the bull cycle is unlikely to repeat itself, according to Katie Talati, director of research at Arca. "There are a couple of reasons; the first is that the power of miners has diminished greatly since the last halving," Talati told CoinDesk in a Zoom call. "There is just so little bitcoin being released right now. Back in 2018, the narrative was much more driven by miner influence, that's not the case anymore."
Glassnode data shows the 30-day average of the number of bitcoin minted currently stands at 900 BTC worth $35 million – that's just 0.14% of bitcoin's 24-hour trading volume of $24.7 billion. The average stood at over 12,000 BTC 10 years ago, above 4,000 BTC between 2013 and 2016, and above 2,000 BTC before 2020.
Besides, with the availability of miner financing facilities, miners no longer need to sell their rewards or coins received for validating transactions on the blockchain to fund their operations, as was the trend in the early days.
"The 2021 migration of hash rate to North America accelerated this change by improving miners' access to sophisticated financing options. The growing number of listed bitcoin mining companies has further boosted access to capital markets," CoinDesk's sister company Genesis Global Trading said in a daily newsletter dated Dec. 27. "With greater funding availability, miners no longer need to sell BTC to fund operations and expansion. This reduces the selling pressure in the market."
Pipe, a trading platform and technology company valued at $2 billion last year, recently announced a launch of an alternative financing product for bitcoin mining hardware and hosting companies with recurring revenue.
All these factors have made miner flows irrelevant to the market. More importantly, the demand side has strengthened with the entry of institutions and macro traders post the March 2020 crash.
"There is so much more demand from the traditional world and institutional investors accessing the market that you are just not going to have... like bottoming out of bitcoin [in 2014 and 2018]," Arca's Talati noted.
Big firms from traditional markets are hiring crypto talent, ignoring the dour price action. That's in stark contrast to previous bear markets when people left crypto jobs and moved to traditional finance. GoldenTree Asset Management, a New York-based with $45 billion under management, which added bitcoin to its balance sheet last year, recently hired BlockTower Capital's co-portfolio manager, Avi Felman, as its new head of digital assets trading. That's a positive sign.
"Today, I am seeing really smart people getting involved [despite the bear run]," Talati said. "To me, I just don't feel like we are ever going to see that four-year cycle again," Talati quipped.
That does not necessarily mean there won't be a bitcoin bull run and halving is irrelevant. It's just that the crypto market has matured with several factors influencing valuations, as is the case with traditional markets. So, the four-year halving-focused cycle offering easy money is perhaps dead.
Bitcoin's 4-Year Halving Cycle May Be Dead