Bitcoin (BTC) was higher for a second day, pushing toward the upper end of the range between roughly $30,000 and $36,000 where it has traded for the past couple weeks.
Ether (ETH), the second-biggest cryptocurrency, rose toward a new record, potentially fueled by fresh interest in the blockchainâs decentralized trading systems amid widespread dismay over the retail-investing platform Robinhoodâs handling of the GameStop saga. (See Token Watch, below.)Â Â
XRP (XRP), whose prices had nearly tripled in the past five days in what appeared to be a coordinated pump by a group of users coordinating on the messaging app Telegram, tumbled 25% on Monday as the effort fizzled. Hey, itâs crypto.Â
In traditional markets, European and Asian shares rose and U.S. stock futures pointed toward a higher open, amid renewed optimism for economic stimulus and the distribution of coronavirus vaccines. GameStop shares lost nearly a third of their value on Monday following last weekâs 400% short squeeze.Â
Silver, whose prices had shot up to an eight-year high after a series of posts on Redditâs WallStreetBets forum calling for a âshort squeeze,â tumbled as some commenters pushed back against the narrative; precious-metals analysts for the lenders HSBC and Commerzbank warned that the rally would be hard to sustain. Gold weakened 0.6% to $1,849 an ounce.Â
With the coronavirus vaccine distribution well underway, Wall Street analysts are sketching out what the economy might look like as 2021 unfolds and social-distancing measures recede.Â
The short answer is that activity is set to heat up, which could also provide the first real test of the hidden inflationary pressures that might have built up over the past year. Whatever happens will likely prove crucial for the bitcoin market, since the cryptocurrency has become one of the most popular ways for big investors to bet on the likelihood of rising prices or dollar debasement.Â
The U.S. Congressional Budget Office projected on Monday that gross domestic product will expand by 3.7% this year, after a 2.5% contraction in 2020. But Bank of America, the second-biggest U.S. lender, is even more optimistic, recently boosting its forecast for this yearâs growth to 6%, from 4.5% at the start of the year. Â
A key question for the inflation-watchers, of course, is just how much stimulus money will be pumped into the economy by the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve.Â
President Joe Biden has proposed a $1.9 trillion stimulus bill, but a group of senators from the opposition Republican party on Monday released details of a $618 billion proposal they argue is more appropriate. Bank of Americaâs analysts assume the package will end up around $1 trillion. Â
Why it matters is that as Americans start to get out and about, a surge in consumer spending looks likely. The Bank of America analysts estimate thereâs already some $1.6 trillion of excess savings that might start to trickle into the economy.Â
âThe jolt from stimulus, the support of excess savings and the green light from lower virus cases should unleash pent-up consumer spending,â the Bank of America economists wrote. âStronger growth means a lower unemployment rate and greater inflation pressure.â
That outlook raises the question of how the Fed might respond, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell stating last week that itâs âtoo early to be talking about datesâ for tapering the central bankâs $120-billion-a-month of bond purchases â funded via money-printing â that are currently ongoing to provide stimulus to financial markets.Â
By the middle of this year, if the economy is recovering quickly, Powell and his colleagues might find it harder to characterize any talk of tapering as still too soon. Because these are typically well-telegraphed affairs, the actual tapering might start six to seven months after that. Call it early 2022.Â
âWe believe the Fed will have difficulty justifying persistently large asset purchases in the face of a sustainable decrease in Covid cases, economic overheating, and frothy asset prices,â according to Bank of America.Â
On the other hand, the Fed might flinch.Â
âWe can envision a scenario whereby the Fed signals an intention to taper/starts tapering, markets react negatively, and the Fed finds that they need to continue purchasing or extend the duration of their purchases in order to preserve market functioning,â according to Bank of America.Â
Itâs that latter scenario â or even just the prospect of it â that might drive bitcoin prices a lot higher. Based on the reluctance of central bankers to withdraw stimulus, not to mention the market lurches late last year when a new U.S. stimulus bill seemed in doubt, the scenario isnât all that implausible.Â
â Bradley Keoun
Bitcoinâs ongoing range play between $30,000 and $40,000 could end with a bullish breakout as demand from investors continues to outstrip new supplies of the cryptocurrency.
In 2021 so far, around 26,000 new bitcoins have been produced by miners on the Bitcoin blockchain, data provider Glassnode said in a weekly report. Yet in the same period, the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust has acquired over 40,000 BTC. Â
In another bullish indicator, the number of coins held on exchange addresses continues to slide, interpreted as a sign of waning interest from sellers. The balance of bitcoin held across all exchanges fell to a 2.5-year low of 2,349,040 on Monday, according to Glassnode.
On the bearish side, a stronger dollar could play spoilsport to any push higher. The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the greenbackâs value against major currencies, is looking north, with price charts showing a major bullish pattern known an âinverse head-and-shoulders breakout.â
âIf a bullish trend develops from DXYâs latest breakout, it could be a problem for bitcoin,â trader and analyst Alex Kruger told CoinDesk.Â
â Omkar Godbole
Read More: Bullish Bitcoin Fundamentals Point to Renewed Price Rally Ahead
The spillover to digital markets from the past weekâs GameStop saga has taken on a new form: Soaring demand for digital tokens associated with cryptocurrency exchanges and the arcane but fast-growing arena of decentralized finance, known as DeFi, which could provide an alternative to Wall Street and traditional trading platforms.
âIt seems investors are looking for the next trade to cycle through,â Matt Blom, head of sales and trading for the cryptocurrency exchange firm EQUOS, wrote Tuesday in a note to clients.Â
The exchange Binanceâs in-house BNB token hit a new all-time high on Monday, just days after rival FTXâs FTT token logged a new record, CoinDeskâs Muyao Shen reported.
Prices have also hit new highs for tokens from decentralized exchanges, which are essentially just automated, blockchain-based software protocols that can be used to trade digital assets. Uniswapâs UNI and SushiSwapâs SUSHI both saw big price jumps â a dynamic that might reflect retail investorsâ growing concerns with centralized trading platforms amid widespread anger over Robinhoodâs trading suspensions last week. Trading volumes on the decentralized exchanges,, hit a record above $50 billion in January, CoinDeskâs Zack Voell reported.Â
Ether, the native blockchain of the Ethereum blockchain, where much of the DeFi development is taking place, has pushed back toward a record high above $1,400.Â
âDecentralized trading, decentralized lending, decentralized insurance, decentralized everything starts to make a lot more sense in light of what is happening today in the traditional financial system,â Jeff Dorman, chief investment officer of the cryptocurrency-focused Arca Funds, wrote Monday in his weekly newsletter.Â
âItâs pretty obvious that the WSB traders are applying the same principles of the digital/CryptoAsset world to the stock market and they are loving the fact that the old schoolers are hating it,â billionaire Mark Cuban writes in a blog post. (CoinDesk)
Coinbase has reportedly tapped Nasdaq for its planned direct listing, according to The Block. Existing Coinbase investors have already been trading shares through Nasdaqâs Private Market platform, where the company has notched an implied valuation of $50 billion.Â
Winklevossesâ Gemini crypto exchange inks partnership with crypto lender Genesis to give customers option to earn up to 7.4% annual interest on holdings, CoinDeskâs Nathan DiCamillo reported. The new offering aims to lure away customers turned off by âanemicâ interest rates from traditional banks, Gemini COO Noah Perlman said. According to DiCamillo, the annual yield is consistent with whatâs typically seen among centralized crypto lenders but pales in comparison to yield farming interest rates in decentralized finance (DeFi), which are much higher but more erratic. (EDITORâS NOTE: Genesis is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which also owns CoinDesk.)Â
OKEx announces plans to integrate Lightning Network in Q1. (OKEx via Twitter)
Robinhood has raised $3.4 billion from investors over the past several days, CoinDeskâs Danny Nelson reported. The online trading platformâs backers are apparently looking past the blowback from Robinhoodâs trading suspensions amid the peak of the runup in prices for GameStop, AMC and other âmeme stocks.â CFO Jason Warnick said the cash infusion will help Robinhood âscale to meet the incredible growth weâve seen and demand for our platform.â Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev is expected to testify before the U.S. House of Representativesâ financial-services committee on Feb. 18, CoinDeskâs Sebastian Sinclair reported.Â
Even before the pandemic hit, global debt was at a far higher level than before the financial crisis of 2008, according to the International Monetary Fund. The figure reached $197 trillion at the end of 2019, for a debt-to-GDP ratio of 226%, according to an IMF blog post on Monday. That compares with a ratio of 193% in 2007. But because of unusually accommodative monetary policies (i.e. interest rates set at close to zero or even negative levels), the average debt expense as a share of revenue was 0.3 percentage points lower in 2019, according to the IMF. With U.S. government debt alone rising by about $4 trillion to about $27 trillion, the year-end 2020 numbers are likely to look a lot uglier.  Â