- Bitcoin is set to buck historically bullish halving trend, economist says.
- Several macroeconomic and industry factors threaten to spoil the celebratory mood.
Another voice is warning that Bitcoinâs halving, anticipated on April 20, may diminish the top cryptocurrencyâs price.
Paolo Tasca, founder of the DLT Science Foundation and a professor at University College London, told DL News that a poor macroeconomic backdrop, recent gains, and selling from Bitcoin miners will make it difficult for Bitcoin to rally.
âHalvings have been followed by price appreciation afterwards,â Tasca said. âSome investors think history is going to repeat itself.â
$12 billion price driver
But this time is different â Bitcoin has soared thanks to more than $12 billion in inflows to Bitcoin ETFs. New approvals of the dozen or so funds in January has opened up the crypto asset class to a broad new swathe of investors.
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That ETF-driven price catalyst means that when it comes to the halving, investors will likely âsell the news,â he said.
Heâs referring to a financial term where an expected positive event can often be priced in to an asset, while the event itself becomes a catalyst to sell.
Bitcoin halvings are usually considered bullish events because they cut Bitcoin rewards to miners in half, reducing the supply.
Price drops in the weeks following Bitcoin halvings arenât unprecedented. After the second halving in July 2016, Bitcoin fell 26% before rebounding.
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Macroeconomic headwinds
Tasca said macroeconomic factors may cause a post-halving Bitcoin rally to fizzle.
âWe are in a period of high inflation, high interest rates and entering a period of liquidity tightening,â Tasca said, noting that during previous halvings âinterest rates were close to zero, which were good conditions to propel allocation into risky assets.â
Heâs not the only one to say so.
Quinn Thompson, founder of crypto hedge fund Lekker Capital, previously told DL News that rising yields on long-duration bonds is dampening Bitcoinâs price.
The pressure on long-duration bonds has a âtightening effect on financial conditions,â Thompson said. âThis is bad for Bitcoin because it implies less liquidity.â
Itâs the same thing that weighed on Bitcoinâs price from March 2022, when bond yields started rising as the Fed raised interest rates to fight inflation.
This situation tightened liquidity, suppressing investor interest in risky bets like Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies and driving prices down.
Arthur Hayes, founder of crypto exchange BitMEX, has also predicted Bitcoinâs price will fall around the time of the halving amid a combination of Americans selling their digital assets ahead of the April tax deadline, and the Federal Reserveâs quantitative tightening programme.
Miners ready to sell
Bitcoin miners are a wildcard.
Miners are sitting on $5 billion in Bitcoin that they may want to liquidate, Tasca said.
Some miners have already indicated plans to sell some of their Bitcoin to fund other purchases.
Hut 8, a Bitcoin mining company with $573 million worth of Bitcoin on its balance sheet, told DL News that it plans to start deploying it after the halving. Itâs looking to buy smaller miners that are struggling with the halvingâs reduction of mining rewards.
Marathon Digital Holdings, another top US Bitcoin mining firm, also previously told DL News it was âshopping aroundâ for acquisitions ahead of halving.
Tim Craig is DL Newsâ Edinburgh-based DeFi Correspondent. Reach out with tips at tim@dlnews.com.