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Thought that there would be a bounce at around $8900 to $9400/$9500 before the next move. So I closed shorts at $8900 and started longing from there.
Was also expecting a bounce after the first candle and went long. Was around 8500, then that second candle hit and had to scurry to fund account so it didn't get liquidated which luckily I managed to avoid.
FOMO hit me hard and is why I should always follow my gut and wait for the action to stabilize before making the next move. Lost about $200 on that mistake but at least it was only previous profits that was eaten.
Something about this doesn't look right and I don't see it as a coincidence. Just a few hours before the Bakkt launch the hash rate fell by 31%. In the past few months the hash rate has steadily increased along with the narrowing range. So what if somebody or a just a few big miners were waiting for the Bakkt launch? When it turned out to be rather underwhelming price action wise they decide to dump.
This has none of the characteristics of a usual bear market. See the chart I posted. Money actually flowed in pushing the price of Tether up while almost nothing flowed out. Yeah the market as a whole took a beating but where is that money then? It's mostly related to the price of BTC tanking.
While that may be the case it looks like this wasn't an usual event. If it was common nobody would have noticed but everyone did. Here's also as explanation of how the metrics don't coincide this time as they usually do https://blockgeeks.com/why-did-the-bitcoin-hashrate-suddenly-plummet-down/Hashrate didn't actually dump, there was just a period of very slow block finding which create false numbers for hashrate. Without going and doublechecking this extensively a 31% reduction in hashrate would imply roughly 31% slower block finding which happens every other day.
Now it might be that the slowly block finding was in fact a result of many machines shutting down who were gambling at a less attractive mining outcome just to get coins and then hopefully sell at much higher after BAKKT pump the market which didn't happen.
I have seen in the past during 3-4hrs of below average block finding ie. 1-2 blocks an hour for 4-5hrs stretch that the hashrate prediction drops over 50% and then suddenly the block finding catches up going to 12-15blocks an hour for next 3 hrs and the hashrate then shows a near 100% hashrate increase which is clearly just due to luck factor in block finding recovery.
The money yesterday just moved back into USDT/USD/EUR or whatever and sitting idle.
Remember if the market sells all BTC back to USDT, the USDT total marketcap wont suddenly increase yet the BTC marketcap will plummet. This is what I suspect happened to altcoins yesterday , people cashed out back to fiat and waiting without selling altcoin for BTC.
While that may be the case it looks like this wasn't an usual event. If it was common nobody would have noticed but everyone did. Here's also as explanation of how the metrics don't coincide this time as they usually do https://blockgeeks.com/why-did-the-bitcoin-hashrate-suddenly-plummet-down/
Though we can all speculate about the size of it this does look to be a real "dump" in hash power.
That's what I think as well. Who it was doesn't really matter but it wasn't bear market related like is being touted.So the one thing that makes the most sense for the rapid dump yesterday is that it all started to dump rapidly after 1.2million BTC were confirmed into an exchange from a private wallet.
So the main question is why such a large transfer took place and why it was dumped pretty much straight onto the market assuming it was not just moved to cause market panic but considering the huge market dump I think this is real and someone crazy enough just went and dumped it straight into the orderbook in lumpsums.
That's what I think as well. Who it was doesn't really matter but it wasn't bear market related like is being touted.
... or if it's totally banned by all governments.
I have a different opinion on that. If the global governments ban crypto the market price is likely to shoot up perhaps with fewer players but it will get rid of speculators and actually attract anarchists and people from countries who needs to use crypto to work around government restrictions.
Basically think of the crypto price in Zimbabwe as a good example. If global governments enforce such strict bans then crypto will shoot up in price as it becomes a mostly blackmarket product.
Completely banning anything have always lead to a rise in price rather than a collapse. Think of alcohol bans, cannabis bans etc. Cannabis being the most recent example that once it is not as outlawed the price start to tank.
Yeah that could happen if it is banned but it's not something us normal folk will dabble with anymore. So whatever the price, it wouldn't matter anymore to us. Same way I don't know the price of Heroin because it's illegal and it's something I'll never need to know.