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Bitcoin, Ethereum Tank; Big Rewards Can Entail Lots Of Risk. What To Do Next

Published 06/28/2021, 09:33 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com 

  • Not a question of if, but when the correction would occur
  • Picking tops and bottoms in any market is a fool’s game
  • Trade with the trends; they are your only friend as sentiment rules
  • Bitcoin and Ethereum have the critical mass traders require
  • Respect sentiment without sentimental emotions

CME Bitcoin futures closed 2020 at $29,220 per token. At the $33,500 level at the end of last week, Bitcoin delivered a 14.6% return since the end of last year.

Ethereum futures began trading on the CME in early February at $1669.75 per token. At $1941.75 on June 25, they were 16.3% higher over the past five months.

In the interim, Bitcoin traded to over $65,500 and Ethereum to above $4,400 per token. The current prices are looking mighty good compared to where they were at the end of last year, but don’t tell that to anyone who decided to pile into the leading cryptocurrencies near the highs.

Parabolic market moves are like shooting stars. When gravity hits a parabolic market, the result is often price carnage. Everyone loves a bull market, which tends to become magnetic. Like a game of musical chairs, when the music suddenly stopped in April and May, the latecomers were left without chairs, holding Bitcoin and Ethereum long positions with massive losses.

While the decline has shaken the confidence of market participants, it has only made the diehard devotees more excited. Lower prices offer an opportunity to load up and buy more tokens.

The degree of reward is always a function of risk in any market. The highly volatile cryptocurrency asset class has plenty of reward potential but carries a commensurate risk level.

Not a question of if, but when the correction would occur

It is still challenging to imagine that an asset that was going for five cents in 2010 rose to over $65,500 in 2021. I have been involved in markets for over four decades and I never witnessed that type of price appreciation. The only examples from history are from economies that suffered during hyperinflationary periods.

Meanwhile, cryptocurrencies remain an emerging asset class. For many, the attraction appeals to a libertarian ideology that removes the control of the money supply from the hands of governments.

Governments derive power from controlling the purse strings. Cryptocurrencies are a direct challenge to that power, which is a roadblock for future success.

However, with limited supplies fueled by bullish trends, Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the over 10,600 other cryptos reached lofty levels in 2021. While devotees of libertarianism have ideological reasons for holding cryptos, many others became mesmerized by the prospects of turning a small investment into a large fortune.

After all, someone with the foresight to buy $100 of Bitcoin eleven years ago at five cents per token turned that small cash outlay into over $130 million at the April 14 peak. Even though Bitcoin dropped to the $33,000 level as of June 25, the investment was still worth over $66 million.

The price action tells us that cryptocurrencies rose to unsustainable levels. 

Picking tops and bottoms in any market is a fool’s game

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the other cryptocurrencies may be a burgeoning asset class, but they are still asset markets. Ideology and fortune-hunting aside, they move higher when buyers are more aggressive and lower when selling dominates buying.

After four decades in markets, I learned that fundamental supply and demand analysis goes only so far in determining the path of least resistance for asset prices. The market sentiment that creates trends can be a far more powerful indicator of price direction. Therefore, when markets are rallying, they tend to move to levels few analysts expect.

Conversely, when they decline, prices can fall to an illogical, unreasonable, and irrational level. Less liquid markets tend to experience the most dramatic moves as selling can disappear during rallies and buying can evaporate during downside corrections.

Cryptocurrencies have limited supplies, and sentiment tends to focus in one direction, causing extreme moves higher or lower. Picking tops or bottoms during moves becomes an exercise in ego.

Market participants that attempt to pick tops or bottoms are going against trends. While countertrend trading or investing can create profits at times, it increases the chances of losses. More traders and investors have lost their shirts by ignoring influential market trends than by following them. 

Trade with the trends; they are your only friend as sentiment rules

Successful traders and investors know that the trend is your best friend until it bends. Since late 2017, when the CME introduced Bitcoin futures, there have been five significant trend changes.

BTC Futures Monthly
Source: CQG

The monthly chart highlights the five significant trend changes since Bitcoin futures burst on the scene in December 2017:

  1. December 2017 through December 2018 - the price fell from $20,650 to a low of $3,120 per token.
  2. December 2018 through June 2019 - Bitcoin rallied from $3,120 to $13,915.
  3. June 2019 through March 2020 - the leading crypto’s price fell from $13,915 to $4,210.
  4. March 2020 through April 2021 - Bitcoin rose from $4,210 to $65,520.
  5. April 2021 through ? - the price fell from $65,520 to a low of $28,800 so far.

A trend-following system is currently short Bitcoin and many other cryptocurrencies as sentiment remain bearish with the recent price action. 

Bitcoin and Ethereum have the critical mass traders require

Many crypto devotees believe the current corrective period is the perfect opportunity to load up on Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other tokens. Many smaller cap tokens continue to attract buyers looking for the next crypto that will deliver Bitcoin and Ethereum type rewards.

Buying the smaller tokens is nothing more than a highly speculative investment. Most of the over 10,000 cryptos filling computer wallets are likely to wind up as worthless dust collectors. However, there could be a few diamonds in the rough that will deliver substantial returns over the coming months and years.

Meanwhile, trading and investing are two entirely different animals. Traders follow trends, understanding that liquidity is essential. The ability to execute buying and selling orders on a tight bid-offer spread is crucial for a trader’s success. While even the most liquid cryptos can experience massive price moves over short periods, the odds of price gaps decrease as a function of market caps.

As of June 26, only 64 cryptos—or under 0.60% of the asset class—had over $1 billion market caps.  At the $32,700 level, Bitcoin’s stood at the $613 billion level. Ethereum’s was $211 billion at $1810 per token. Tether, the third-place token, had a $62.6 billion market cap.

Bitcoin and Ethereum have enough critical mass and liquidity for trading. However, they both can be highly volatile, so traders should only approach risk positions understanding that the potential for profits is a function of the risk, which is exceptionally high. 

Trading cryptos involves looking to take a significant percentage of a price trend from the market. Trading with the trend does not include buying the low or selling the high. Moreover, trend-following traders will always be short at bottoms and long at highs. The goal is to capture the meat of a move and ride it higher or lower to achieve a maximum return. 

Respect sentiment without sentimental emotions

The sentiment is critical when it comes to the path of least resistance of any market in any asset class. Respecting sentiment is the first step in profiting from a bullish or bearish trend.

Identifying a trend becomes a validation of the current sentiment and requires removing all emotion and ideology from the equation. At the same time, it removes stress from the equation as stress comes from thinking and overthinking a trade. A sentiment shift leads to action. In markets, trend followers do not think—they react to market conditions, blocking out all other noise.

Therefore, following the sentiment removes any sentimentality from the equation.

Over the past weeks, Bitcoin and Ethereum tanked with prices less than half the levels at the April and May highs. While some market participants view the current price levels as a bargain, I remain agnostic. The price action will tell me when to be long. As of June 26, I continue to ride the current trend, which is lower.

Latest comments

thanks for great content , according to your through analysis we are experiencing a downtrend on cryptos until further bull market starts to pickup. based on your expertise how can we determine that the bull market will start? do you have certain technical indicators that can tell us when is a good time to start longing? thanks
Well, in the 3 days since June 26, when the article was written, ether rallied almost 30%. The author described himself exactly in his article. He wrote: "Moreover, trend-following traders will always be short at bottoms and long at highs." And he was/is.
I feel safer holding crypto than not holding crypto… inflation could run away at any time… the war on the us dollar has just begun… this is a replay of george soros bs the bank of england all over again
As long as there is this much money on the top whatever they say goes. If they want to short Bitcoin there is nothing anyone can do about it. Bitcoin is not a company they do not provide a dividend. Bitcoin is merely in an instrument of taking people's money who don't have much.
By your standard the central bank is the exact same thing… i dont think you understand why people flock into decentralized currency and why the governments monopoly on money is coming to an end…
 I'm just saying if they own alot than they control it going down. There is literally no reason for them to short it other than to inspire Fear Uncertainty and Doubt into the masses to sell their positions. After that they will buy it and balloon it to the moon. They short it just so they can buy it cheaper. Bitcoin not being a business also means it cannot go out of business. It literally cannot go to zero. Its impossible.
This is a great time to DCA into large cap cryptos. Regardless of the short term trend, the long-term trend is upward.
Bitcoin, Ethereum tank is hardly an appropriate title of this article unless you want your news about six weeks too late - in the last 24 hours they are both up substantially. crypto is here to stay are there are enough hodlers to keep prices up generally - and now that large global institutions are finally realising how awesome blockchain is, and even just obtaining a glimmer of the profit potential of blockchain, the money will continue to pour in - lest we forget that many of the really powerful people in the world own vast amounts of wealth and the media - so expect more FUD to scare retail investors into selling so the rich and powerful can pick up their favourite cryptos at knock down prices - and expect the players in government, and the financial authorities to do their bit to knock crypto down - money is pouring out of savings accounts (like, why would anyone keep devaluing fiat money in a savings account?) and moving into crypto investment - the banks hate it
you mean like sell @ 58400 off swing;)
article is a filler. super late.
We are witnessing the failure of modern governments and central banking. Bitcoin and perhaps few other crypto's empower people smart enough to take their savings with them.
Good Article . When is a Trend offically a Trend? Is it Relative ? Ie. 1 minute chart/1 yr chart of price. Anyone with an answer is appreciated . With the understsndjng its impossianke to pick bottom or top. Thx
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