Following Monday's start-the-week-off-right rally, stocks have gyrated about the flatline the rest of the week, signaling that a good number of major players have already left the exchanges for holidays and that the recently-completed tax reform bill has been almost completely priced into stocks.
Thus, we're left with little other than churn as the days before Christmas dwindle to none. There are likely to be few surprises on Wall Street as the week closes out, though overnight, the cryptocurrency world had plenty upon which to contemplate going forward.
Bitcoin, the gold standard of cryptos, crashed below $13,000, marking a 17% drop in less than the past 24 hours.
A number of suspect factors are to blame for its recent demise, those consisting largely of rumors and some fact, such as large "whale" investors getting out while the mania is still hot, the emergence of Hashgraph, which was of mention here yesterday, and the abrupt realization by more than a few people that Bitcoin - due primarily to the severe slowness of clearing transactions and the unwieldy large amount of computing power necessary to mine coins - is unreliable and unworkable as a currency.
Within a short time, it's highly likely that bitcoin could be trading in the hundreds of dollars rather than in the thousands. Recall that its current price was largely achieved in just the past 12 months, growing from sub-1000 at the start of the year.
Other cryptos are being mercilessly battered, led by IOTA, down nearly 40% overnight, denoting the downside of 24/7 markets.
What goes up, must come down, and that is the lesson for the day. Stocks will also suffer at some point, though betting on that happening has been a fool's game since the worrisome days of 2008-09.
For now, it looks like a quiet day of trading stocks ahead, with downside risk prominent.
At the Close, Thursday, December 21, 2017:
Dow: 24,782.29, +55.64 (+0.23%)
NASDAQ: 6,965.36, +4.40 (+0.06%)
S&P 500: 2,684.57, +5.32 (+0.20%)
NYSE Composite: 12,800.21, +52.66 (+0.41%)
Showing posts with label cryptocurrency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cryptocurrency. Show all posts
Friday, December 22, 2017
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Fittingly, Bitcoin Nears $10,000 on Cyber Monday
Catching a ten-bagger is a noteworthy event in any trader's history, but believers in Bitcoin - the original and most prominent cryptocurrency on the planet - are enjoying their days in the sun as the currency heads for $10,000, currently trading for more than $9900 per digital coin.
Bitcoin ended 2016 at a mere $970.17, but it's gone completely bonkers in 2017 as more and more people adopt the digital currency as a hedge against the faults of fiat currencies of central bankers that are based on nothing but faith.
While bitcoin is similarly faith-based, it has properties that traditional currencies do not. It is anonymous, and also not subject to excessive printing of fresh fiat out of thin air. The number of bitcoins mined is capped at 21 million. There are only four million left to be mined. After that, there can be no more Bitcoins ever created, so the currency has an inflation governor that is rivaled only by gold, silver and other precious metals.
This advantage is not lost on holders and speculators in Bitcoin. As acceptance and adoption grows, the number of bitcoin holders naturally ratchets up the price. As of this writing, Bitcoin's market cap is higher than many major corporations, making the digital currency something that keeps central bankers on their toes.
Widespread acceptance of Bitcoin threatens the central bank stranglehold on global forex, currencies and commerce. While this speculative phase is phenomenal for early adopters (some who bought into the Bitcoin mania before it was even priced in triple digits), the long-term implications are other-worldly. If Bitcoin - or some other form of cryptocurrency continues to be established globally - it could conceivably rival currencies such as the US dollar, the euro, Japanese yen or China's yuan.
Just as gold and silver have been recognized as money, currency and stores of value for thousands of years, so too, Bitcoin has emerged as a potentially viable alternative for the 21st century.
At the Close, Monday, November 27, 2017:
Dow: 23,580.78, +22.79 (+0.10%)
NASDAQ: 6,878.52, -10.64 (-0.15%)
S&P 500: 2,601.42, -1.00 (-0.04%)
NYSE Composite: 12,390.78, -31.15 (-0.25%)
Bitcoin ended 2016 at a mere $970.17, but it's gone completely bonkers in 2017 as more and more people adopt the digital currency as a hedge against the faults of fiat currencies of central bankers that are based on nothing but faith.
While bitcoin is similarly faith-based, it has properties that traditional currencies do not. It is anonymous, and also not subject to excessive printing of fresh fiat out of thin air. The number of bitcoins mined is capped at 21 million. There are only four million left to be mined. After that, there can be no more Bitcoins ever created, so the currency has an inflation governor that is rivaled only by gold, silver and other precious metals.
This advantage is not lost on holders and speculators in Bitcoin. As acceptance and adoption grows, the number of bitcoin holders naturally ratchets up the price. As of this writing, Bitcoin's market cap is higher than many major corporations, making the digital currency something that keeps central bankers on their toes.
Widespread acceptance of Bitcoin threatens the central bank stranglehold on global forex, currencies and commerce. While this speculative phase is phenomenal for early adopters (some who bought into the Bitcoin mania before it was even priced in triple digits), the long-term implications are other-worldly. If Bitcoin - or some other form of cryptocurrency continues to be established globally - it could conceivably rival currencies such as the US dollar, the euro, Japanese yen or China's yuan.
Just as gold and silver have been recognized as money, currency and stores of value for thousands of years, so too, Bitcoin has emerged as a potentially viable alternative for the 21st century.
At the Close, Monday, November 27, 2017:
Dow: 23,580.78, +22.79 (+0.10%)
NASDAQ: 6,878.52, -10.64 (-0.15%)
S&P 500: 2,601.42, -1.00 (-0.04%)
NYSE Composite: 12,390.78, -31.15 (-0.25%)
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