Investors will be questioning whether Bitcoin can continue its upward trajectory that kicked started from a lowly $4,000 back in March.
Trough to peak, Bitcoin surged by an even more impressive 506% and that was in just 3-quarters.
If we take the same trajectory, Bitcoin should hit the dizzying heights of $143,000 in late 2021 before any pullback.
For investors that time it right, they can convert a 2nd hand sedan into a 2nd hand supercar or a down payment on a palace.
The Drawbacks
In late December, we saw the U.S SEC file a lawsuit against Ripple, claiming that Ripple had not registered XRP as a security.
The damage to Ripple’s XRP and the broader crypto market was extensive.
Ripple’s XRP tumbled from a November all-time high of 0.78716 to a December low of $0.2000. That is an alarming 746% slump and in just one month.
As a result of the SEC move, Bitcoin lost momentum, with a pullback to $21,000 levels before steadying. The broader market also hit reverse, with the total crypto market cap falling from a high of $680.60bn to $590.85bn. It may not compare to the market collapse of early 2018, but it was still likely to have been a painful experience for those who jumped in too late.
Back in January 2018, the total crypto market cap had climbed to an all-time high of $761.74bn before its collapse to just $91.24bn in December 2018.
Looking at the market resilience this time around, Bitcoin and a number of the other major cryptos have held their ground.
While the late 2020 momentum rally drove the cryptos to record highs, there was no herd mentality sell-off. This should comfort existing investors and those sitting on the sidelines.
One must question the SEC’s timing. Ripple’s XRP is not new to the market. More importantly, cryptos were under the magnifying glass back in late 2017, so why now?
It may have something to do with the approach towards $1.00 levels. An impressive run from a March low of $0.1165.
For Ripple and XRP holders, however, it wasn’t just the 700% rally that raised eyebrows. Ripple’s platform is one that continues to make a dent into more traditional remittance platforms.
Even after the so-called “Bubble” of 2017, cryptos have yet to become widely acceptable to regulators. It almost seems as the SEC was saving the silver bullet for the next rally that was almost 3-years in the making.