Thursday, April 17, 2014

Finally, an immediate-term bottom for Bitcoin

For the first time in nearly four months, Bitcoin has confirmed an immediate-term bottom. 

By closing two days higher in succession above its 15-day moving average on April 15, Bitcoin (basis BitStamp) has confirmed an immediate-term bottom per the rules of our technical trading discipline. 


As difficult as it is to fathom, this marks the only time in the year to date that Bitcoin has managed to close two days higher above the dominant immediate-term trend line.  The weakness in the virtual currency’s price has been persistent, and only now that a substantial number of “weak hands” have been washed out of the market will Bitcoin be able to establish an interim bottom.

Now that Bitcoin has been able to decisively break out above its 15-day trend line, we’ll need to watch for the final establishment of the low from earlier this month.  The inevitable pullback should ideally close above the pivotal low at the 360 level.  This would form a higher low and would give allow Bitcoin to establish a stronger base from which to launch a meaningful technical rally. 

Incidentally, the nearest overhead resistance benchmark for Bitcoin is the 575-600 area where the 200-day moving average intersects in the daily chart (see above).

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Investors to Mt. Gox: A bitcoin for your troubles

According to The Wall Street Journal, a group of investors has offered to purchase bankrupt bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox for a token payment of one bitcoin, or about $400.

The group justified the near-zero price citing an “information vacuum” over Mt. Gox’s missing bitcoins that made it hard to place a value on the lost digital currency, as reported by Reuters.  Mt. Gox was formerly the largest bitcoin exchange but fell from its lofty position in February after filing for bankruptcy.  Mt. Gox contention is that hackers stole some 750,000 bitcoins belonging to its customers along with 100,000 of its own bitcoins after exploiting a security flaw in its software.

The investor group trying to purchase the crestfallen Mt. Gox includes Brock Pierce, a former child actor-turned entrepreneur, and venture capitalists William Quigley and Matthew Roszak.  According to Reuters, “The group hopes to revive the exchange and set aside 50 percent of its transaction fees to pay back burned customers and other creditors over time.” 

The acquisition must be approved by a Japanese bankruptcy court before being finalized.  The near-zero valuation of the proposed deal, however, is expected to provide a significant barrio to the deal’s consummation.  

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Survey: Americans still don’t trust Bitcoin

Nearly half of American adults know what Bitcoin is, but few of them trust it enough to invest in it over gold.  That’s the finding of a recent survey conducted online within the United States by Harris Interactive on behalf of financial platform Yodlee. 

The survey, which polled 2,039 adults ages 18 and older, suggests Americans are still uncertain of its reliability and usefulness as a mainstream currency.  The survey found that while nearly half (48 percent) of American adults know what Bitcoin is, trust in the currency among that group is very low.  Only 13 percent said they would choose it as an investment over gold.

Increased knowledge of Bitcoin can correspond to reduced trust in it, the survey found.  People from America’s Western states are more likely to know about Bitcoin than people from the South or Midwest (55 percent, compared to 46 percent in the South and 41 percent in the Midwest).  Only 7 percent of Westerners who know what Bitcoin is, however, would choose to invest in Bitcoin over gold – the lowest percentage of any region.

“The financial industry benefits greatly from disruptive technology, but security is unfortunately a bigger challenge than some new financial innovators expect.” said Tim O’Brien, Yodlee’s senior vice president of operations and information security.  “Bitcoin has addressed some major opportunities in the financial system, but the vulnerability of some Bitcoin exchanges, along with the currency’s overall volatility, are still serious issues.  Bitcoin will be hard for consumers to understand and trust on a large scale until secure, user-friendly tools and services emerge to make it as convenient and safe as possible to use.”

Young adults tend to be the biggest Bitcoin supporters.  Twenty percent of Americans aged 18-34 who know what Bitcoin is said they would choose to invest in Bitcoin over gold – making this group over twice as likely as those age 55+ (8%) to do the same.  Young adults aged 18-34 who know what Bitcoin is are also far more supportive of Bitcoin’s libertarian values: 39 percent were not in favor of any government being able to regulate Bitcoin, compared to, 28 percent aged 45-54 and 24 percent aged 55 and older.

Americans’ attitudes about Bitcoin regulation are equally confused. When asked if any government should be allowed to regulate Bitcoin, nearly half (45 percent) of Americans who knew about the cryptocurrency said they were unsure.  Of those with a firm opinion, 44 percent said a government should be allowed to regulate it and 56 percent said no government should be able to do this.

The survey also revealed a strong male bias in terms of Bitcoin awareness. When asked if they knew what Bitcoin is, only 35 percent of women across the country said yes, compared to 63 percent of men. Only 14 percent of men and 10 percent of women preferred Bitcoin as an investment over gold.  The survey found moreover that men aged 18-34 who know what Bitcoin is are among the biggest Bitcoin fans: 22 percent would choose it over gold and were significantly more likely to say this than men age 55+.  Women aged 55-64 are the most skeptical: only 4 percent would choose it over gold.

Trust in Bitcoin is still quite low across most age ranges, the survey found. Percentages of people who are aware of Bitcoin and would choose to invest in Bitcoin over gold:

18-34: 20 percent
35-44: 12 percent
45-54: 13 percent
55-64: 7 percent
65+: 8 percent

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

IRS treats Bitcoins as property

“The taxman has spoken, said Richard Rubin and Carter Dougherty in Bloomberg.com.  In ‘its first substantive ruling on the issue,’ the Internal Revenue Service said this week that it will treat Bitcoins ‘as property’ for tax purposes, applying the same rules used to ‘govern stocks and barter transactions.’  The distinction may limit Bitcoin’s utility as a digital currency, but owners may benefit as profits from transactions will be taxed as capital gains, with a cap of 20 percent, and not as ordinary income, which is subject to a top tax rate of 39.6 percent.”  [Source: The Week, April 4, 2014]