Whales Warn: Current Bitcoin Rally Is Illiquid And Overextended

Published by Cyber Flows on

It is Thursday and bitcoin already surged by more than 21 percent into the week. But whales believe the ongoing bull run is fake.

A prominent trader, who is sitting atop a $20 million monthly loss from his anti-rally bitcoin positions, expressed his conviction over potential bull exhaustion.

He called bitcoin’s upside run as an “organized FOMO rally,” wherein big players are manipulating small traders to enter the market using the “halving” narrative.

“The weekly Bitcoin chart is the definition of an illiquid altcoin,” the whale retweeted ZeroHedge’s Tyler Durden this Thursday. “Hilarious cycle it’s been through. My hope is that the halving will financially destroy as many Chinese miners as possible and we can actually have a legitimate bull market instead of this pump and dump movie.”

LIQUIDITY CRUNCH

The next Bitcoin Halving event on May 12, 2020 will slash the cryptocurrency’s mining reward by half – from 12.5 BTC to 6.25 BTC.14 BTC & 30,000 Free Spins for every player, only in mBitcasino’s Crypto Spring Journey! Play Now!

Traders anticipate that the newfound scarcity would somewhat make bitcoin more valuable in the future, with a popular price prediction model even giving a $100,000 price target by 2021.

The sentiment saw bitcoin price recovering wholly from its 2020 bottom at $3,858. As the price closes towards $9,500 in the Thursday trading session, traders are optimistic about an extended upside momentum above $10,000 ahead of the halving.

But the supply-slashing event brings short-term risks to the very community that relentlessly produces bitcoin. Miners risks going out of business as their dollar-based mining rewards gets cut by half. So to cover their operational costs, they would need to sell their newly minted cryptocurrency stash for higher rates.

The buying pressure then shifts to the spot market. Traders and investors are face-to-face with an economic crisis brought forth by the fast-spreading COVID19 pandemic.

Under these times, asset managers, hedge funds, family offices, and even average Joes prefer to exit volatile assets to hold cash and mitigate potential losses.

That’s called a liquidity crunch. The historical sell-off in Bitcoin and the U.S. benchmark S&P 500 in mid-March happened for the very same reason. Later, the central banks intervened with expensive stimulus programs, bringing the much-needed liquidity into the risk-on markets. As usual, bitcoin benefitted.

Source: bitcoinist.com

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