Litecoin (LTC), a nine-year-old cryptocurrency whose price returns have chronically underperformed the bigger and better-known bitcoin in recent years, is hitching its wagon to a new star: privacy.
The blockchain industry subsector of âprivacy coinsâ â cryptocurrencies with embedded technology that shields identifying information from public view â is becoming one of this yearâs hottest buys. One of the biggest privacy coins, zcash (ZEC), which offers âshielded transactionâ capabilities, has nearly tripled so far in 2020, while monero (XMR), which uses a technique called âring signaturesâ to obscure sender and receiver data, has doubled.Â
Litecoin founder Charlie Lee told CoinDesk in an interview the project is now looking to adopt key privacy-enhancing features, which he sees as increasingly attractive to cryptocurrency users. The enhancements are already being tested, and an upgrade to the main network is scheduled for next year.  If the effort succeeds, it might inject a jolt of enthusiasm into a project that has suffered from a lack of momentum in digital-asset markets. Litecoin is up 21% this year after a 38% gain in 2019, which pales in comparison to bitcoinâs 59% year-to-date gain and a 94% increase last year. Â
âI want to make it so that users donât have to worry about giving up their financial privacy by using litecoin,â Lee said. âEven if youâre not doing anything illegal, you donât want people to know how much money you have or what your paycheck is.â â Daniel Cawrey Read More:Â In Effort to Differentiate, Litecoin Makes a Move to Privacy
Bitcoin is hovering near $11,400 at press time, having snapped a six-day winning trend with a 1% drop on Tuesday.Â
Notably, the cryptocurrency formed an âinside dayâ candle on Tuesday, aborting the immediate bullish technical outlook. Inside day candle occurs when the cryptocurrency trades well within the preceding dayâs high and low and indicates consolidation.Â
As such, Tuesdayâs high of $11,567 is now the level to beat for the bulls. A break above that level would signal a continuation of the recent rally and open the doors for resistances above $12,000.
Alternatively, acceptance under Tuesdayâs low of $11,314 would imply a bearish reversal and could yield deeper declines.Â
That said, the on-chain metrics favor a continued rally. The seven-day average of bitcoinâs hashrate or measure of the processing power dedicated to the blockchain rose to a record high of 144.29 exa hashes per second (quintillion hashes per second) on Tuesday, surpassing the previous peak of 143.19 EH/s observed on Sept. 18, according to data source Glassnode.
It indicates high miner confidence in the cryptocurrencyâs price prospects. Miners largely operate on cash and liquidate their BTC holdings to fund operations. As such, they are likely to dedicate more resources to the computer-intensive mining process if they are bullish on price.
â Omkar Godbole
Read More:Â Bitcoin Steady Above $11,400 as Hashrate Reaches New High
Bitcoin (BTC): Giant money manager Fidelity pitches bitcoin as âalternative investment.â
Ether (ETH): Ethereumâs network upgrade (Eth 2.0) is expected soon and could address scaling issues associated with its legacy platform.
JPMorgan calls Squareâs $50M bitcoin investment âstrong vote of confidenceâ for the cryptocurrency (CoinDesk)
Bank of Russia seeks limit on amount of digital assets retail investors can buy (CoinDesk)Â
Blockchain could give $1.7T boost to global economy by 2030, PwC report says (CoinDesk)Â
New cVIX index tracks crypto market volatility (CoinDesk)Â
The saga of Blue Kirby shows DeFiers are a trusting lot, until theyâre not (CoinDesk)
Coinbase chief compliance officer departs amid as CEOâs âapoliticalâ stance proves political (CoinDesk)
Nasdaq-listed Marathon Patent teams with Beowulf Energy to co-locate bitcoin mining facility in Montana (CoinDesk)Â
Lesson of third quarter is that crypto is âstill a retail dominated industry,â The TIEâs Joshua Frank writes (eToro/The TIE)
BitMEX charges show that days are gone when innovators could âtake a lackadaisical approach to regulatory and legal complianceâ (Arca)
Coin Metrics analysis maps BitMEX execs Arthur Hayes, Ben Delo and Samuel Reed to their respective withdrawal keys (Coin Metrics):
IMFâs Tobias Adrian sees risk of âsharp adjustment in asset prices or periodic bouts of volatilityâ (IMF)
BlackRockâs Larry Fink sees future with just 50% of workers in offices (Bloomberg)
Argentine president says government has no intention of devaluing countryâs currency (Bloomberg)
Chinese tech hub Shenzhen toys with digital yuan pilot program (SCMP)
Interest rate cuts in U.S. and elsewhere have China buying hitherto âunattractiveâ government bonds from Japan (CNBC)
Environmental, social and governance concerns could take toll on stock valuations, ValueActâs Jeffrey Ubben says (Reuters)