Bitcoin’s Falling Price Nothing More Than Perception, Or Is There Manipulation?

Published at: May 25, 2018

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, so you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

The past few months in Bitcoin’s history have been very interesting to watch, especially when honing in on its price fluctuations as a gauge of where it is going next. From about November 2017 to now, Bitcoin has almost come full circle as its price skyrocketed to $8,000 and beyond to $20,000 before falling back to the $8,000 mark.

Taking the time frame from November 2017, when people were cheering its groundbreaking move beyond the $8,000 mark, to today, when people are petrified that it will fall below that price, we can see very different perceptions in trader confidence.

However, traders in the know are less concerned with these movements of price and are not letting the typical Bitcoin fluctuations get to them. Some are explaining the current price as still massively positive, especially if one zooms out on the charts and looks at where Bitcoin is in the bigger picture.

There are others, though, that are pointing towards market manipulation as a potential cause for why Bitcoin’s price keeps shedding its gains between $8,000 and $10,000.

Returning to its range

Part of the reason for the concern over the Bitcoin price is that many investors only got into the market in and around the time the price was hovering around $20,000. The hype and adoption was massive at that stage, with Coinbase boasting about adding 100,000 users in 24 hours at the beginning of November last year.

That spike in price was unprecedented and unusual. As Anthony Pompliano, the managing partner at Full Tilt Capital, explained to Cointelegraph, the Bitcoin price is simply returning to its range.

“The day to day fluctuations aren’t very interesting to me. As your perspective zooms out, you notice that BTC will go through market volatility within a range. The Q4 parabolic run last year broke out of that range, so naturally the market will return to the range.”

“I think we’re back in the natural market range now and we should continue to see growth through 2018. I’m more bullish today than I’ve ever been.”

Pompliano also adds that Bitcoin does react to positive news, and that there are often spikes associated with that, but there has not been that much positive news of late.

“Additionally, I don’t think there is any specific positive news to drive a bull market. We’re seeing a hangover feeling among retail investors because of regulatory concerns, along with the last few months of bear market. Once we get a few positive news items, we should see quick inflection points,” he concluded.

There has been some good news relating to blockchain adoption, and while it is not being separated from Bitcoin, the technology adoption may not play in to the price of Bitcoin directly, as Pompliano adds, but it is still exciting to see.

“I don't think many people correlate ‘Blockchain adoption’ with ‘Bitcoin price’ or other cryptocurrencies. If they do, they shouldn't. It is exciting to see these companies leveraging blockchain technology and I anticipate this trend will accelerate.”

Zooming out

Pompliano mentions in his assessment that those who are concerned about the price of Bitcoin should zoom out a bit. Another figure who reiterates this idea is Mati Greenspan, senior market analyst at eToro:

“Anyone who thinks the crypto-market is falling should probably zoom out a bit. The total market cap of all digital assets is up 330 percent over the last year. Though it's not as high as it was during the peak, this is still unprecedented growth for any asset class, to say the least.”

“The price of Bitcoin on May 24, 2017 was $2,250, and at the time many thought it was a bubble and the price was too high. Today we're seeing lows of $7,300, which isn't as strong as the $20,000 peak but certainly still in a strong upward trend despite the sizable pullback."

Manipulating the market

Recently, the U.S. Justice Department said it had opened a criminal probe into whether traders are manipulating the price of Bitcoin and other digital currencies.

This in itself indicates that perhaps where there is smoke there is fire, and it also means that there will be a dramatic ratcheting up of U.S. scrutiny of these markets that critics say are rife with misconduct.

Another trader who for a while now has been calling market manipulation a cause of Bitcoin’s fluctuations has been vindicated by this investigation. Ronnie Moas, a stock picker who has turned his attentions towards cryptocurrencies as well, believes the Bitcoin price is being manipulated.

“I always mention manipulation, and regulation. When we broke below $9,000, $8,000 and $7,000, I said the price was being manipulated. The government is starting to crack down on this right now.”

Moas goes on to explain how easy it is to manipulate the Bitcoin market, as long as a person, or group, has large sums of money:

“If you have $2 bln, you want a diversified portfolio, and for me diversified is a $200,000 position, but there can be a position that is $200 mln, because you want 10 percent of your money in Bitcoin. But you don't want to pay $20,000 for a Bitcoin, so what you do -- and you can call it a Whale, a cartel, a shark, a consortium, a trading group -- you dump $20, $30, $40 million dollars on the market, and create selling pressure. People see those orders on the books, and they jump in front of them, because they are afraid you are going to move and shake the market down, and this feeds off itself.”

“The technical analysts then kick in with their sell signals, and there is panic and capitulation, and when the market capitulates, those people quietly come back in and buy five to ten times what they dumped for pennies on the dollar.”

Don’t panic

People still fear that Bitcoin can drop to zero, but that fear is waning somewhat, especially with the adoption of Blockchain and cryptocurrency technology happening outside the financial and trading realms. Amazon, Microsoft, the entire banking ecosystem, and even some governments have all shown an interest in keeping the technology around for a long time.

The volatility of Bitcoin may not be as dramatic -- both up and down -- and that is something people have to come to grips with, but as the experts above mention, there has still been positive growth over a relatively short period of time.

Tags
Related Posts
Volatility Data Suggests Bitcoin Price Drop to $10K Before Rally Resumes
A recent report by crypto derivatives platform, Zubr, found that despite being extremely volatile when compared to traditional asset classes, Bitcoin (BTC) maintains a “market equilibrium” nature for the majority of the time. The report just a few days after Bitcoin rallied beyond the $12,000 mark and its volatility finally recovered from a multi-year low. Using data from CoinAPI, a cryptocurrency market data provider, Zubr found that Bitcoin price swings are typically accompanied by nearly symmetrical movements on the opposite side, creating opportunities both on the positive and negative side. According to Zubr: “The majority of the time, Bitcoin will …
Bitcoin / Aug. 3, 2020
Bitcoin Hovers Near 6,600, While Most Top Coins See Little Price Volatility
Friday, Oct. 5: cryptocurrencies are seeing little volatility over the past 24 hours to press time, with the majority of losses and gains of top coins capped within a 1 percent range on the day, as data from Coin360 shows. Market visualization by Coin360 Ripple (XRP) is the only outlier in the top ten coins, down a little over 3 percent on the day to trade at $0.52. The asset – which in September briefly outflanked Ethereum to seal the second spot ranking on CoinMarketCap listings – has had a shaky start to the month, and is currently trading almost …
Bitcoin / Oct. 5, 2018
This simple Bitcoin options strategy lets traders profit while also hedging their bets
For traders who are undecided on Bitcoin's (BTC) move, the "long condor with call options" yields optimal results with very low risk. This strategy offers protection down to $53,500, which would be a 7% downside move from the current $57,600, and returns a positive outcome up to $67,500. Options markets provide more flexibility to develop custom strategies. Unlike futures, there are two separate instruments available. The call option gives the buyer upside price protection, while the protective put option offers the opposite. This long condor strategy has been set for the Dec. 31 expiry and uses a slightly bullish range. …
Bitcoin / Dec. 1, 2021
Bitcoin’s in a bear market, but there are plenty of good reasons to keep investing
Let's rewind the tape to the end of 2021 when Bitcoin (BTC) was trading near $47,000, which at the time was 32% lower than the all-time high. During that time, the tech-heavy Nasdaq stock market index held 15,650 points, just 3% below its highest ever mark. Comparing the Nasdaq's 75% gain between 2021 and 2022 to Bitcoin's 544% positive move, one could assume that an eventual correction caused by macroeconomic tensions or a major crisis, would lead to Bitcoin’s price being disproportionately impacted than stocks. Eventually, these “macroeconomic tensions and crises” did occur and Bitcoin price plunging another 57% to …
Bitcoin / Sept. 2, 2022
Bitcoin’s bear market is far from over, but data points to improving investor sentiment
2022 was a near-unprecedented year of extremes and black swan events for the crypto market, and now that the year is about to wrap up, analysts are reflecting on the lessons learned and attempting to identify the trends which may point to bullish price action in 2023. The collapse of Terra Luna, Three Arrows Capital and FTX created a credit crunch, a severe reduction in capital inflows and an increased threat that additional major centralized exchanges could collapse. Despite the severity of the market downturn, a few positives have emerged. Data shows long-term hodlers and smaller-sized wallets are actively accumulating …
Bitcoin / Dec. 12, 2022