Bitcoins short-term price prospects slightly improved, but most traders are far from optimistic – Cointelegraph

A mild sense of hope emerged among Bitcoin (BTC) investors after the June 18 drop to $17,600 becomes more distant and an early ascending pattern points toward $21,000 in the short-term.

Recent negative remarks from lawmakers continued to curb investor optimism. In an interview with Cointelegraph, Swiss National Bank (SNB) deputy head Thomas Muser said that the decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystem would cease to exist if current financial regulations are implemented in the crypto industry.

An article published in The People's Daily on June 26 mentioned the Terra (LUNA), now renamed Terra Classic (LUNC), network's collapse and local blockchain expert Yifan He referring to crypto as a Ponzi scheme. When asked by Cointelegraph to clarify the statement on June 27, Yifan He stated that "all unregulated cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin are Ponzi schemes based on my understanding."

On June 24, Sopnendu Mohanty the chief fintech officer of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) pledged to be "brutal and unrelentingly hard" on any "bad behavior" from the cryptocurrency industry.

Ultimately, Bitcoin investors face mixed sentiment as some think the bottom is in and $20,000 is support. Meanwhile, others fear the impact that a global recession could have on risk assets. For this reason, traders should analyze derivatives markets data to understand if traders are pricing higher odds of a downturn.

Retail traders usually avoid monthly futures because their price differs from regular spot markets at Coinbase, Bitstamp and Kraken. Still, those are professional traders' preferred instruments as they avoid the funding rate fluctuation of the perpetual contracts.

These fixed-month contracts usually trade at a slight premium to spot markets because investors demand more money to withhold the settlement. Consequently, futures should trade at a 5% to 10% annualized premium in healthy markets. One should note that this feature is not exclusive to crypto markets.

Whenever this indicator fades or turns negative, this is an alarming, bearish red flag signaling a situation known as backwardation. The fact that the average premium barely touched the negative area while Bitcoin traded down to $17,600 is remarkable.

Despite currently holding an extremely low futures premium (basis rate), the market has kept a balanced demand between leverage buyers and sellers.

To exclude externalities specific to the futures instrument, traders must also analyze the Bitcoin options markets. For instance, the 25% delta skew shows when Bitcoin whales and arbitrage desks are overcharging for downside or upside protection.

During bearish markets, options investors give higher odds for a price crash, causing the skew indicator to rise above 12%. On the other hand, a market's generalized FOMO induces a negative 12% skew.

After peaking at 36% on June 18, the highest-ever record, the indicator receded to the current 15%. Options markets showe an extreme risk-aversion until June 25, when the 25% delta skew finally broke below 18%.

The current 25% skew indicator continues to display higher risks of a downside from professional traders but it no longer sits at levels that reflecti extreme risk aversion.

Related: Celsius Network hires advisers ahead of potential bankruptcy Report

Some metrics suggest that Bitcoin may have bottomed on June 18 after miners sold significant quantities of BTC. According to Cointelegraph, this indicates that capitulation has occurredalreadyand Glassnode, an on-chain analysis firm, demonstrated that the Bitcoin Mayer Multiple fell below 0.5, which is extremely rare and hasn't happened since 2015.

Whales and arbitrage desks might take some time to adjust after key players like Three Arrows Capital face serious contraction and liquidation risks due to a lack of liquidity or excessive leverage. Until there's enough evidence that the contagion risk has been alleviated, Bitcoin price probably will continue to trade below $22,000.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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Bitcoins short-term price prospects slightly improved, but most traders are far from optimistic - Cointelegraph

It Is Time To Turn The Tables On The Bitcoin Environmental Debate – Bitcoin Magazine

This is an opinion editorial by Marie Poteriaieva, a Ukrainian-French crypto industry observer and educator, following the space since 2016.

Bitcoin is routinely treated as an environmental pariah: its energy consumption is quite simple to track and quick-label as anti-ecological. This statement is wrong on many levels, but public opinion is rarely nuanced, and politicians often have little to lose by attacking Bitcoin on ecological grounds at a (comparatively) small expense of alienating crypto enthusiasts they can position themselves as planet-saviors to a larger audience.

This approach wont last long though. More and more voices are rising to contest this immature presentation of Bitcoin, its mining, and its importance for the world. These arguments go in three main directions:

- Energy consumption of Bitcoin versus the traditional monetary system it is intended to replace.

- Green mining and its potential to boost green energy development around the world.

- Multi-purpose use of miners, recycling their waste heat or capturing flare gas.

The notion of a lot only makes sense in comparison. In the case of Bitcoin energy consumption, the most relevant comparison is with the fiat money system (and not with some small European country, as some clickbait articles may quote).

While Bitcoin is pretty much self-sufficient, in the fiat world its job is done by a plethora of different organizations in charge of issuance, distribution, management, bookkeeping and payment services.

A 2021 study by Galaxy Digital, an asset management firm specializing in cryptocurrencies, looked deeply at only four metrics of the fiat world branches, servers, ATMs and card networks' data centers and estimated that the banking system consumes over 263 TWh yearly.

More detailed research, recently published by Michel Khazzaka of the Paris-based consultancy Valuechain Technology Ltd., combs through the energy consumption of more aspects of fiat money: the printing and minting of physical notes and coins, ATMs, cash in transit, cash at electronic points-of-sale, card payments, banking offices, banking employees commutes, banking IT and inter-banking. The results are stunning: the traditional money sector excluding finance and insurance would consume around 4,981 TWh yearly.

Bitcoin network hash rate the collective computational effort miners are deploying to mine a block is public information, which makes it possible to calculate Bitcoin electricity consumption by estimating how much energy is needed to produce it.

The most popular resource on Bitcoin energy consumption is the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI), which estimates electricity use by simplistic weighting of profitable hardware, a method relying heavily on electricity cost estimate and is thus not particularly accurate. CBECI currently estimates Bitcoin yearly energy use at 120 TWh.

The above-mentioned study by Valuechain proposes a different methodology: counting miner nodes and their efficiency, i.e., watts consumed per hash and the release date of each miner (assuming that non-ASIC mining is marginal and should not be taken into account anymore). This method gives another figure of 88.95 TWh.

Bitcoin is thus estimated to consume 2-56 times less energy than the fiat system it is an alternative to.

A number of studies, such as those conducted by the Bitcoin Mining Council, have pointed out that the exceptionally high percentage of renewables in the Bitcoin energy mix 58% is considerably more than any other major industry.

This is not surprising, for Bitcoin miners are mobile, and they naturally go where the energy is cheapest which in many cases means going to green energy sources that cannot efficiently stock and transport their extra energy.

Bitcoin mining is also flexible, meaning that a miner could be turned on and off instantaneously following energy fluctuations, which in case of green energy can be considerable.

These two qualities allow Bitcoin mining farms to be installed in some of the worlds most remote places, like a dam on the Amazon or a solar farm in West Texas, making them more profitable and incentivizing more green energy developments.

Good examples of such incentive alignment would include two hydroelectric plants built on the edges of Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The initial investments were enough to build the plants, but not enough to get electricity to people, who continued using charcoal and cutting trees in Virunga, precipitating its deforestation until a Bitcoin mining company from Paris came. Now based in Switzerland, BBGS has installed mining rigs on the dams, making them profitable and allowing them to finance the rest of operations, including the necessary infrastructure.

Miners are subject to constant innovation, not only in the size of their chips (smaller chips equal less energy required to transmit data), but also in technologies allowing them to capture and repurpose the waste heat they generate, making mining de facto carbon-neutral.

Canadian MintGreen uses miners to warm water for a whiskey distillery, and a project to heat buildings in Vancouver is underway. Norwegian Kryptovault recycles the waste heat to dry timber, and soon seaweed. Swedens Genesis Mining uses its miners to heat up greenhouses. Similar initiatives are popping up all over the world, and projects like The Blocks custom silicon rigs will only increase the number of ways a Bitcoin miner can be used.

Whats more, Bitcoin mining can be carbon-negative, i.e., effectively reducing the quantity of greenhouse gasses emitted into the atmosphere. It can do so by capturing flared gas a by-product of oil production, which is often too expensive to transport, so it is simply flared into the atmosphere, emitting harmful air pollutants like black carbon, methane and volatile organic compounds. Oil producers all over the world are being increasingly told to curb the gas flaring, and Bitcoin mining is a clever way to do it.

Some smaller oil producers in Texas and Montana have already partnered with mining companies to capture the flared gas, but it was the arrival of ExxonMobil and its pilot Bitcoin mining program in North Dakota that has definitely put this practice on the map.

Humanity needs energy to live and to develop, and instead of trying to curb its use, bringing us back to candlelight, we should aim to develop energy efficiency and sustainability.

Bitcoin uses 2-56 times less energy than the fiat system, and the Lightning Network can allow it to scale as needed without spending much more.

Bitcoin mining is already the greenest industry, and it can incentivize many more green energy developments around the world.

Bitcoin miners can also be used for a number of non-mining endeavors, including actually preventing more greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.

Now its the fiat systems turn to justify its ecological footprint.

This is a guest post by Marie Poteriaieva. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.

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It Is Time To Turn The Tables On The Bitcoin Environmental Debate - Bitcoin Magazine

El Salvador’s $425 million bitcoin experiment isn’t saving the country’s finances – CNBC

A bystander uses a Bitcoin ATM in San Salvador, El Salvador, on May 16, 2022.

Alex Pena | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

El Salvador bet its economic salvation on bitcoin, but so far the gamble isn't paying off like President Nayib Bukele hoped it would.

The government's crypto coffers have been cut in half, bitcoin adoption nationwide isn't really taking off, and crucially, the country needs a lot of cash, fast, to meet its debt payments of more than $1 billion in the next year. This comes as the price of bitcoin has fallen more than 70% from its November 2021 peak, and more than 55% from the time Bukele announced his plan.

Meanwhile, El Salvador's economic growth has plummeted, its deficit remains high, and the country's debt-to-GDP ratio a key metric used to compare what a country owes to what it generates is set to hit nearly 87% this year, stoking fears that El Salvador isn't equipped to settle its loan obligations.

Pair these economic woes with a renewed war on gang violence, and you have all the fixings of a country on the brink.

"On the surface, the whole bitcoin thing hasn't really paid off," said Boaz Sobrado, a London-based fintech data analyst.

It isn't bitcoin's fault that the government is edging toward financial ruin.

The government has an unrealized paper loss on bitcoin of around $50 million, which the finance minister notes is less than 0.5% of the national budget. In aggregate, the entire experiment (and all its associated costs) have only run the government around $374 million, according to estimates. That's not nothing especially considering the fact that El Salvador has $7.7 billion of bonds outstanding but to an economy of $29 billion, it is comparatively small.

The optics aren't good, though.

Negotiations have stalled with international lenders in part because they are unwilling to throw money at a country that is spending millions in tax dollars on a cryptocurrency whose price is prone to extreme volatility. Rating agencies, including Fitch, have knocked down El Salvador's credit score citing the uncertainty of the country's financial future, given the adoption of bitcoin as legal tender. That means that it's now even more expensive for President Bukele to borrow much-needed cash.

"In terms of their financial situation, El Salvador is in a very difficult place. They have a lot of bonds that are trading severely discounted," continued Sobrado.

"The economic policy of the country is essentially magical thinking," said Frank Muci, a policy fellow at the London School of Economics, who has experience advising governments in Latin America.

"They've spooked the bejesus out of financial markets and the IMF," continued Muci, who tells CNBC that nobody wants to lend money to Bukele unless it's at "eye-gouging rates" of 20% to 25%.

"The country is sleepwalking into a debt default," said Muci.

But the millennial, tech-savvy president, who once touted himself as the "world's coolest dictator" on his Twitter bio, has tethered his political fate to this crypto gamble, so there is a very big incentive to make it work in the long run and to pay off the country's debt in the interim. Bukele faces re-election for another five-year presidential term in 2024.

Well before President Bukele got it in his head that bitcoin was a magical elixir that would bandage over longstanding economic vulnerabilities, the country was in a lot of trouble.

The World Bank projects that the Salvadoran economy will grow by 2.9% this year and 1.9% in 2023, down from 10.7% in 2021. But that growth itself was a bounceback from an 8.6% contraction in 2020.

Its debt-to-GDP ratio is almost 90%, and its debt is expensive at around 5% per year versus 1.5% in the U.S. The country also has a massive deficit with no plans to reduce it, whether through tax hikes or by substantially cutting spending.

In a research note from JPMorgan, analysts warn that El Salvador's Eurobonds have entered "distressed territory" in the last year, and S&P Global data reportedly shows that the cost to insure against a sovereign debt default is hitting multi-year highs.

Both JPMorgan and the International Monetary Fund warn the country is on an unsustainable path, with gross financing needs set to surpass 15% of GDP from 2022 forward and public debt on track to hit 96% of GDP by 2026 under current policies.

"In the past three, four months, what they've done is implement gasoline subsidies, which are super expensive," said Muci, who has expertise in economic diversification and public financial management, and has taken part in applied research projects for El Salvador, Venezuela, and Honduras.

"This is a country that's rudderless in terms of economic policy. I mean, they don't know where they're going, or what they're doing. I think it's a classic case of one day at a time," he said.

All this comes as El Salvador faces imminent debt repayment deadlines in the billions of dollars, including an $800 million Eurobond that matures in January.

El Salvador has been trying since early 2021 to secure a $1.3 billion dollar loan from the IMF an effort that appears to have soured over President Bukele's refusal to heed the organization's advice to ditch bitcoin as legal tender. This tracks with Fitch's recent downgrade, which was also attributed to El Salvador's "uncertain access to multilateral funding and external market financing given high borrowing costs," plus its "limited scope for additional local market financing."

The president's efforts to consolidate power have also driven up this risk premium. Bukele's New Ideas party has control over the country's Legislative Assembly. In 2021, the new assembly came under fire after it ousted the attorney general and top judges. The move prompted the U.S. Agency for International Development to pull aid from El Salvador's national police and a public information institute, instead re-routing funds to civil society groups.

Additionally, El Salvador can't print cash to shore up its finances. El Salvador dollarized in 2001, meaning that it ditched its local currency, the coln, in favor of the U.S. dollar. Only the Federal Reserve can print more dollars. Meanwhile, its other national currency, bitcoin, is revered for the fact that it, too, is impossible to mint out of thin air.

In Sept. 2021, El Salvador became the first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender.

The initiative involved buying bitcoin with public funds, as well as launching a national virtual wallet called "chivo" (Salvadoran slang for "cool") that offers no-fee transactions and allows for quick cross-border payments. For a country that is a largely cash economy where roughly 70% of people do not have bank accounts, credit cards, or other traditional financial services chivo was meant to offer a convenient onramp for those who had never been a part of the banking system.

The experiment also involved building a nationwide infrastructure of bitcoin ATMs across the country and requiring all businesses to accept the cryptocurrency.

The president upped the ante in November when he announced plans to build a "Bitcoin City" next-door to the Conchagua volcano in south eastern El Salvador. The bitcoin-funded city would offer significant tax relief, and geothermal energy rolling off the adjacent volcano would power bitcoin miners.

All in, the government has spent about $375 million on the bitcoin rollout, including a $150 million trust designed to convert bitcoin instantly into dollars, $120 million on the $30 bitcoin bonus given to each citizen who downloaded the chivo wallet (no small sum in a country where themonthly minimum wage is $365), and the roughly $104 million the government has publicly admitted to spending on bitcoin. Muci notes that these expenses plus the $50 million in unrealized losses on the country's bitcoin portfolio means that the country has spent around $425 million on "making bitcoin happen."

But nine months in to this nationwide bet on bitcoin, and it doesn't appear to immediately be delivering on a lot of its big promises.

President Bukele tweeted in January that the app had 4 million users (out of a total population of 6.5 million), but areportpublished in April by the U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research showed that only 20% of those who downloaded the wallet continued to use it after spending the $30 bonus. The research was based upon a "nationally representative survey" involving 1,800 households.

"In terms of actual penetration of bitcoin transactions, it seems to be quite low," explained Sobrado. "There seem to have been issues with regards to the state-issued wallets. Lots of people downloaded it, but it was buggy. It wasn't really the best user experience."

Of those who did use the government's crypto wallet, some had technical problems with the app. Other Salvadorans reported cases of identity theft, in which hackers used their national ID number to open a chivo e-wallet, in order to claim the free $30 worth of bitcoin offered by the government as an incentive to join.

Another hope for the chivo wallet was that it would help save hundreds of millions of dollars in remittance fees. Remittances, or the money sent home by migrants, account for more than 20% of El Salvador's gross domestic product, and some households receive over 60% of their income from this source alone. Incumbent services can charge 10% or more in fees for those international transfers, which can sometimes take days to arrive and require a physical pick-up.

But in 2022, recent data shows that only 1.6% of remittances were sent via digital wallets.

In terms of merchant adoption, a survey published in March by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of El Salvador found that 86% of businesses have never made a sale in bitcoin.

"They gave people the wallets, they forced businesses to accept them, but essentially, in my opinion, it's a big nothing burger," said Muci, who previously worked at the Growth Lab at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. "Nobody really uses the app to pay in bitcoin. People that do use it, mostly use it for dollars."

Bitcoin City is on hold, as is the $1 billion bitcoin bond sale, which was initially put on ice in March because of unfavorable market conditions.

If the president's tweets are to be believed, then the government's personal bitcoin investment is down about $50 million on paper. (None of these losses are locked in until the country exits its bitcoin position.)

"Ultimately, El Salvador's problems are just tangential to currency," said Muci.

"The issues have to do with security, economic productivity and other things. And bitcoin has nothing to do with any of that," he said.

El Salvador's big bitcoin gamble may be struggling at the moment, but Sobrado tells CNBC that it has undoubtedly been a win in terms of attracting bitcoin tourists.

"While they might be down in terms of unrealized losses in their bitcoin investment, they are extremely up in terms of tourism," said Sobrado.

"They have attracted a lot of people who are bitcoin believers and a lot of capital from these people. And I think it is entirely possible that if you think of the unrealized losses as a marketing campaign, El Salvador has already achieved what it wanted to," continued Sobrado, who also noted that countries like Costa Rica spend billions of dollars on marketing campaigns.

The tourism industry is up 30% since the Bitcoin Law took effect in September, according to official government estimates. The country's tourism minister also notes that 60% of tourists now come from the U.S.

The bitcoin experiment also hasn't hurt the president's popularity. Bukele's approval ratings are north of 85% thanks in large part to his tough-on-crime approach to leading. That's no small thing to a country that was more dangerous per capita than Afghanistan five years ago.

"Mr. Bukele is, to this day, one of the most popular presidents that is in power," said Sobrado. "He has approval rates of 80 plus percent, that people in other parts of the world just dream of."

As for the country's oppressive levels of debt, virtually everyone agrees that President Bukele will do whatever it takes to pull together enough cash to make good on what the country owes this year and next. A big part of that incentive comes from the upcoming presidential election in 2024, in which Bukele is vying for another five-year term.

JPMorgan sees a "high likelihood" of that $800 million bond maturity being paid in January, in order to "avoid disruptive credit events that might derail his prospects for a potential re-election." Although Fitch expects El Salvador to meet its near-term debt service payments, the credit agency warns that keeping pace with its loans will prove "more onerous as the year progresses."

Muci agrees that El Salvador will be able to scrape together the cash, but he warns that ultimately the country's public finance situation is unsustainable.

"The plane is gonna crash eventually, if they don't change things," said Muci. "If they don't raise taxes, cut spending, start being much more disciplined. You know, convincing markets that they're sustainable."

He added, "Bitcoin doesn't solve any of El Salvador's important economic problems."

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El Salvador's $425 million bitcoin experiment isn't saving the country's finances - CNBC

FBI Arrests 2 Men Planning ‘Violent’ Robbery of Bitcoin Worth Millions of Dollars They Face 20 Years in Prison Regulation Bitcoin News – Bitcoin…

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has arrested two men who participated in a violent plan to break into a familys home in the middle of the night to steal bitcoin worth tens of millions of dollars, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. They could go to prison for 20 years.

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced Friday the unsealing of an indictment charging Dominic Pineda and Shon Morgan with a plan to commit home invasion robbery for tens of millions of dollars in bitcoin.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrested the two on Thursday in Virginia.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams detailed:

The defendants participated in a violent plan to break into a familys home in the middle of the night and force its residents to provide the code to what the defendants believed was tens of millions of dollars in bitcoin currency.

According to the court document, the defendants participated in the plan from May 18 to May 24, 2020, to break into a home in Irvington, New York and rob its residents of cash and cryptocurrency.

Around the time of the planned home invasion, bitcoin was trading at about $10,000 per coin. BTC peaked at an all-time high price of $68,892 in November 2021. It has since dropped in value and is currently trading at $20,892.

The Justice Department described:

Pineda, 21, of Manassas, Virginia, and Morgan, 21, of Centreville, Virginia, are each charged with conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951, which carries a maximum term of 20 years in prison.

The Hobbs Act defines robbery as unlawfully taking another persons property by means of actual or threatened force.

What do you think about this case? Let us know in the comments section below.

A student of Austrian Economics, Kevin found Bitcoin in 2011 and has been an evangelist ever since. His interests lie in Bitcoin security, open-source systems, network effects and the intersection between economics and cryptography.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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FBI Arrests 2 Men Planning 'Violent' Robbery of Bitcoin Worth Millions of Dollars They Face 20 Years in Prison Regulation Bitcoin News - Bitcoin...

Bitcoin Tagging the Lower Monthly Bollinger Band Would Be a Logical Place to Put a Bottom, says John Bollinger – Ethereum World News

Summary:

The creator of the popular technical analysis indicator of Bollinger Bands, John Bollinger, has pointed out that Bitcoin has formed a perfect double top on the monthly chart. In addition, Bitcoin seems to be ready to tag the lower boundary of the monthly Bollinger Band. According to Mr. Bollinger, such an event could signal the possibility of a bottom.

Mr. Bollinger shared his Bitcoin insights through the following statement and accompanying chart.

Picture perfect double (M-type) top in BTCUSD on the monthly chart complete with confirmation by BandWidth and %b leads to a tag of the lower Bollinger Band. No sign of one yet, but this would be a logical place to put in a bottom.

In a similar analysis, popular Bitcoin and crypto analyst, MagicPoopCannon, has pointed out that Bitcoins weekly RSI is more oversold now than ever before. Magic shared his insights through a tweet that can be found below, which also pointed out that the RSI could continue becoming even more oversold given the current market conditions.

However, Magic emphasized the need to remain open to the possibility of a bottom with Bitcoin hitting the recent low of around $17,600.

In a follow-up Tweet, Magic expanded on his analysis that Bitcoin has hit a bottom. He explained that data suggests it might be in. Therefore, being open to its possibility is one approach, and awareness of the potential of Bitcoins price deteriorating is also recommended. He said:

While I am VERY SCPETICAL of a bottom, I see the data that suggests it could be imminent, so I must remain open to it.

As the data improves, more capital can be deployed. If it begins to deteriorate, capital deployment can be halted and/or retracted in defense.

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Bitcoin Tagging the Lower Monthly Bollinger Band Would Be a Logical Place to Put a Bottom, says John Bollinger - Ethereum World News

What are Bitcoin covenants, and how do they work? – Cointelegraph

Various prominent Bitcoin experts, including Adam Back, Jimmy Song and Andreas Antonopoulos, have raised some concerns over the implementation of restrictive covenants, in particular with the BIP119.

In particular, Antonopoulos has voiced concerns over "recursive covenants" that the new update could convey, thereby deteriorating the network. A recursive covenant occurs when a programmer restricts a transaction, but he does it in a way that restricts another transaction after that, starting a domino effect resulting in future limitless recursive covenants.

While locking up where a Bitcoin can be spent is advantageous to ensure more security, it also provides grounds for censorship, and control by governments, which would hinder the very existence of Bitcoin. Authorities could potentially force exchanges to withdraw only to covenants with some control over the coin.

While this same risk already exists, since governments can ask exchanges to send only to addresses with a taproot spend path or multi-sig controlled by them, could the implementation of covenants facilitate malicious purposes where it would make it easier for governments to enforce a sort of on-chain KYC? 

Covenants might interfere with Bitcoin’s fungibility — the ability of each Bitcoin to be identical in function and quality.

While useful for security and scalability, covenants would change the properties of specific Bitcoin units, essentially creating different types of digital currency, distinct according to what could be spent or where it could be sent. 

As a result, those who oppose the change argued that limiting how you can spend your Bitcoin would ultimately limit Bitcoin’s use as a digital currency, with inevitable consequences in its value.

There are strong opinions on covenants' pros and cons; however, debates are healthy and necessary to improve a decentralized and leaderless network. Ultimately, the final decision will be down to the users and node operators who will download the software that better reflects their viewpoint.

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What are Bitcoin covenants, and how do they work? - Cointelegraph

Why you should approach Bitcoin price with caution – FXStreet

Information on these pages contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Markets and instruments profiled on this page are for informational purposes only and should not in any way come across as a recommendation to buy or sell in these assets. You should do your own thorough research before making any investment decisions. FXStreet does not in any way guarantee that this information is free from mistakes, errors, or material misstatements. It also does not guarantee that this information is of a timely nature. Investing in Open Markets involves a great deal of risk, including the loss of all or a portion of your investment, as well as emotional distress. All risks, losses and costs associated with investing, including total loss of principal, are your responsibility. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of FXStreet nor its advertisers. The author will not be held responsible for information that is found at the end of links posted on this page.

If not otherwise explicitly mentioned in the body of the article, at the time of writing, the author has no position in any stock mentioned in this article and no business relationship with any company mentioned. The author has not received compensation for writing this article, other than from FXStreet.

FXStreet and the author do not provide personalized recommendations. The author makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability of this information. FXStreet and the author will not be liable for any errors, omissions or any losses, injuries or damages arising from this information and its display or use. Errors and omissions excepted.

The author and FXStreet are not registered investment advisors and nothing in this article is intended to be investment advice.

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Why you should approach Bitcoin price with caution - FXStreet

Is Bitcoin Really A Hedge Against Inflation? – Bitcoin Magazine

This is an opinion editorial by Jordan Wirsz, an investor, award-winning entrepreneur, author and podcast host.

Bitcoins correlation to inflation has been widely discussed since its inception. There are many narratives surrounding bitcoins meteoric rise over the last 13 years, but none so prevalent as the debasement of fiat currency, which is certainly considered inflationary. Now Bitcoins price is declining, leaving many Bitcoiners confused, as inflation is the highest its been in more than 40 years. How will inflation and monetary policy impact bitcoins price?

First, lets discuss inflation. The Federal Reserves mandate includes an inflation target of 2%, yet we just printed an 8.6% consumer price inflation number for the month of May 2022. That is more than 400% of the Feds target. In reality, inflation is likely even higher than the CPI print. Wage inflation isnt keeping up with actual inflation and households are starting to feel it big time. Consumer sentiment is now at an all-time low.

Why isnt bitcoin surging while inflation is running out of control? Although fiat debasement and inflation are correlated, they truly are two different things that can coexist in juxtaposition for periods of time. The narrative that bitcoin is an inflation hedge has been widely talked about, but bitcoin has behaved more as a barometer of monetary policy than of inflation.

Macro analysts and economists are feverishly debating our current inflationary environment, trying to find comparisons and correlations to inflationary periods in history such as the 1940s and the 1970s in an effort to forecast where we go from here. While there are certainly similarities to inflationary periods of the past, there is no precedent for bitcoins performance under circumstances such as these. Bitcoin was born only 13 years ago from the ashes of the Global Financial Crisis, which itself unleashed one of the greatest monetary expansions in history up until that time. For the last 13 years, bitcoin has seen an environment of easy monetary policy. The Fed has been dovish, and anytime hawkishness raised its ugly head, the markets rolled over and the Fed pivoted quickly to reestablish calm markets. Note that during the same period, bitcoin rose from pennies to $69,000, making it perhaps the greatest-performing asset of all time. The thesis has been that bitcoin is an up and to the right asset, but that thesis has never been challenged by a significantly tightening monetary policy environment, which we find ourselves at the present moment.

The old saying that this time is different, might actually prove to be true. The Fed cant pivot to quell the markets this time. Inflation is wildly out of control and the Fed is starting from a near-zero rate environment. Here we are with 8.6% inflation and near-zero rates while staring recession straight in the eyes. The Fed is not hiking to cool the economy It is hiking in the face of a cooling economy, with already one quarter of negative gross domestic product growth behind us in Q1, 2022. Quantitative tightening has only just begun. The Fed does not have the leeway to slow down or ease its tightening. It must, by mandate, continue to raise rates until inflation is under control. Meanwhile, the cost-conditions index already shows the biggest tightening in decades, with almost zero movement from the Fed. The mere hint of the Fed tightening spun the markets out of control.

There is a big misconception in the market about the Fed and its commitment to raising rates. I often hear people say, The Fed cant raise rates because if they do, we wont be able to afford our debt payments, so the Fed is bluffing and will pivot sooner than later. That idea is just factually incorrect. The Fed has no limit as to the amount of money it can spend. Why? Because it can print money to make whatever debt payments are necessary to support the government from defaulting. Its easy to make debt payments when you have a central bank to print your own currency, isnt it?

I know what youre thinking: Wait a minute, youre saying the Fed needs to kill inflation by raising rates. And if rates go up enough, the Fed can just print more money to pay for its higher interest payments, which is inflationary?

Does your brain hurt yet?

This is the debt spiral and inflation conundrum that folks like Bitcoin legend Greg Foss talks about regularly.

Now let me be clear, the above discussion of that possible outcome is widely and vigorously debated. The Fed is an independent entity, and its mandate is not to print money to pay our debts. However, it is entirely possible that politicians make moves to change the Feds mandate given the potential for incredibly pernicious circumstances in the future. This complex topic and set of nuances deserves much more discussion and thought, but Ill save that for another article in the near future.

Interestingly, when the Fed announced its intent to hike rates to kill inflation, the market didnt wait for the Fed to do it The market actually went ahead and did the Feds job for it. In the last six months, interest rates have roughly doubled the fastest rate of change ever in the history of interest rates. Libor has jumped even more.

This record rate-increase has included mortgage rates, which have also doubled in the last six months, sending shivers through the housing market and crushing home affordability at a rate of change unlike anything weve ever seen before.

30-year mortgage rates have nearly doubled in the last six months.

All of this, with only a tiny, minuscule, 50 bps hike by the Fed and the very beginning of their rate hike and balance sheet runoff program, merely started in May! As you can see, the Fed barely moved an inch, while the markets crossed a chasm on their own accord. The Feds rhetoric alone sent a chilling effect through the markets that few expected. Look at the global growth optimism at new all-time lows:

Despite the current volatility in the markets, the current miscalculation by investors is that the Fed will take its foot off the brake once inflation is under control and slowing. But the Fed can only control the demand side of the inflationary equation, not the supply side of the equation, which is where most of the inflationary pressure is coming from. In essence, the Fed is trying to use a screwdriver to cut a board of lumber. Wrong tool for the job. The result may very well be a cooling economy with persistent core inflation, which is not going to be the soft landing that many hope for.

Is the Fed actually hoping for a hard landing? One thought that comes to mind is that we may actually need a hard landing in order to give the Fed a pathway to reduce interest rates again. This would provide the government the possibility of actually servicing its debt with future tax revenue, versus finding a path to print money to pay for our debt service at persistently higher rates.

Although there are macro similarities between the 1940s, 1970s and the present, I think it ultimately provides less insight into the future direction of asset prices than the monetary policy cycles do.

Below is a chart of the rate of change of U.S. M2 money supply. You can see that 2020-2021 saw a record rise from the COVID-19 stimulus, but look at late 2021-present and you see one of the fastest rate-of-change drops in M2 money supply in recent history.

In theory, bitcoin is behaving exactly as it should in this environment. Record-easy monetary policy equals number go up technology. Record monetary tightening equals number go down price action. It is quite easy to ascertain that bitcoins price is tied less to inflation, and more to monetary policy and asset inflation/deflation (as opposed to core inflation). The chart below of the FRED M2 money supply resembles a less volatile bitcoin chart number go up technology up and to the right.

Now, consider that for the first time since 2009 actually the entire history of the FRED M2 chart the M2 line is potentially making a significant direction turn to the downside (look closely). Bitcoin is only a 13-year-old experiment in correlation analysis that many are still theorizing upon, but if this correlation holds, then it stands to reason that bitcoin will be much more closely tied to monetary policy than it will inflation.

If the Fed finds itself needing to print significantly more money, it would potentially coincide with an uptick in M2. That event could reflect a monetary policy change significant enough to start a new bull market in bitcoin, regardless of whether or not the Fed starts easing rates.

I often think to myself, What is the catalyst for people to allocate a portion of their portfolio to bitcoin? I believe we are beginning to see that catalyst unfold right in front of us. Below is a total-bond-return index chart that demonstrates the significant losses bond holders are taking on the chin right now.

The traditional 60/40 portfolio is getting destroyed on both sides simultaneously, for the first time in history. The traditional safe haven isnt working this time around, which underscores the possibility that this time is different. Bonds may be a deadweight allocation for portfolios from now on or worse.

It seems that most traditional portfolio strategies are broken or breaking. The only strategy that has worked consistently over the course of millennia is to build and secure wealth with the simple ownership of what is valuable. Work has always been valuable and that is why proof-of-work is tied to true forms of value. Bitcoin is the only thing that does this well in the digital world. Gold does it too, but compared to bitcoin, it cannot fulfill the needs of a modern, interconnected, global economy as well as its digital counterpart can. If bitcoin didnt exist, then gold would be the only answer. Thankfully, bitcoin exists.

Regardless of whether inflation stays high or calms down to more normalized levels, the bottom line is clear: Bitcoin will likely start its next bull market when monetary policy changes, even if ever so slightly or indirectly.

This is a guest post by Jordan Wirsz. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.

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Is Bitcoin Really A Hedge Against Inflation? - Bitcoin Magazine

Not All Bitcoin Bear Markets Are The Same – Bitcoin Magazine

This is an opinion editorial by Anthony Feliciano, a Bitcoin event organizer and contributor to Bitcoin Magazine.

On Wednesday, June 15, 2022, the Federal Reserve announced a 75 basis point hike to interest rates and possibly another 75 basis point hike in July. Friday, June 17, bitcoin saw a massive sell-off along with the rest of the crypto markets, shedding billions in total market capitalization. A first for bitcoin happened as well we dipped below the previous cycle's all-time high of $19,756. Bitcoin dipped to ~$17,000, not once but twice, before rebounding to $20,000 levels by Sunday. This had many people talking about the R word for the economy and another crypto winter like that which occurred from January 2018 to December 2020.

Not all bear markets are the same.

I say not all bear markets are the same because we are presented with an unique opportunity. During the last crypto winter, I took a different approach when it came to Bitcoin I went down the rabbit hole. Now if you are just an investor in bitcoin and looking to make money, then yes, you don't like these times. I would suspect there is a very high percentage that is more of the investor than going down the rabbit hole. For those who are peering over the edge looking into the rabbit hole, if we truly get another crypto winter then this bear market is the time to fall into the rabbit hole.

A little over four years ago, I fell into the rabbit hole. My god, what a bumpy, rocky, uneven descent it was into Bitcoin projects. The projects you hear and see today are far different to what we had in 2017 and 2018. Now if you, like me, aren't a coder, and your eyes glaze over looking at the blinking cursor in the terminal, then you probably would have turned around, climbed out and kicked all the dirt back into the hole. Despite not being a coder, I decided to stick it out anyway; a glutton for punishment, I guess, but grateful that I decided to keep going and smoothing those bumps down into smoother, more manageable pathways.

I first decided that I was going to start by making my own Lightning Network (LN) node a few years back. I give a brief overview of a few projects in the article I previously wrote, DIY Bitcoin Nodes. I chose RaspiBlitz as my node, for no particular reason versus other projects I just picked one and decided to build. With a plethora of options inside the RaspiBlitz suite, I learned a lot about Electrum, how to run it properly connected to your own node versus public nodes, and JoinMarket to enhance my privacy when moving around UTXOs between wallets.

Then came an obsession with privacy, in particular smartphones. I used to root my cell phones back in the early 2010s, ran a lot of custom ROMs again I am no coder, so I bricked a few phones in the process. This led to learning about a de-Google phone project called GrapheneOS, so I now have a backup phone that has no sim, was never registered and has been de-Googled. But what is key is that I am able to download many Bitcoin project APK files to this device while still managing to have a working UI that connects with my LN node over Tor. Think of it as a bug out phone, with none of the spyware and all the abilities to interact with your LN node and Bitcoin network.

Now we come to where I am at today, trying to help onboard merchants to accept bitcoin as payments, which is a different type of struggle in its own right. Imagine walking in cold to a brick-and-mortar store and talking to the owner about the ability to accept bitcoin payments, after the last two years of stress they had to deal with. You get the picture. Again, I worked through it, which led to this taking place back in January 2022: the First Successful CryptoBeerKings LN Event.

Even if we are about to enter a recession and/or another crypto winter, there is one thing I learned that doesn't stop: development. Developers are going to continue to develop for the Bitcoin network no matter what. If they didn't stop in 2018, they are certainly not going to stop in 2022. If you are a burgeoning developer yourself, then this is an even better time for you than last cycle, because the coding and tools have become more refined. If you find yourself on the other side of the coin like myself, then applications are the way to go. Take some time to learn about some of the projects out there and how to use them in your everyday Bitcoin rabbit hole life. This is an opportune time to hone your craft, no matter your skill level or what interests you the most. If you can listen to the Bitcoin ethos and fade the noise, I guarantee by the time the next cycle comes about, you will come out of your rabbit hole bright-eyed and ready.

This is a guest post by Anthony Feliciano. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.

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Not All Bitcoin Bear Markets Are The Same - Bitcoin Magazine

Central Bank of Morocco to introduce Bitcoin and crypto regulation bill – Finbold – Finance in Bold

Morocco is joining the list of countries aiming to formally control the crypto sector by reportedly working on a final regulatory framework to guide the market.

The countrys central bank, Bank Al-Maghrib (BAM), is designing a crypto regulation outlook in consultation with a global financial institution, Bitcoin News reported on June 27.

According to BAMs governor Abdellatif Jouahri the institution has engaged with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank on specific benchmarks.

Notably, the IMF has been central in calling on countries to regulate the crypto sector while issuing warnings on the dangers of legalizing assets like Bitcoin. For instance, the institution has urged El Salvador to drop Bitcoin as legal tender stating that the move threatens the countrys economy.

Initial hints indicate that the regulation will likely not ban cryptocurrencies but will seek to promote innovation in the sector while protecting consumers. Some of the pain points Morocco seeks to address will be money laundering and anti-terrorism financing.

Previously, BAMs governor Abdul Latif Al Jawhari had noted that adopting cryptocurrencies in the country was a matter of when not if.

Currently, we cannot adopt cryptocurrencies given the lack of regulatory and legislative frameworks both nationally and internationally. The G20 and many countries stress the importance of having a crypto regulatory framework as well as a regulatory framework for CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currencies), said Jawhari.

In a recent press release, BAM acknowledged that the countrys cryptocurrency sector is increasingly popular. However, the bank has maintained that users must be cautious of the risks associated with the sector.

Interestingly, the country banned Bitcoin trading in 2017, but the assets popularity has grown with the general increase in value in recent years. The popularity meant that the government could no longer ignore the growing prominence.

As of 2021, the country reportedly ranked fourth behind Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya in crypto trading volume across Africa.

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Central Bank of Morocco to introduce Bitcoin and crypto regulation bill - Finbold - Finance in Bold