The year 2022 hasn’t been kind to cryptocurrency buyers, but there is a bright spot that may turn out to be advantageous for other risk takers. According to Coinmarketcap, the entire market capitalization of cryptocurrencies fell by more than half (-56%) in the second quarter after a significant sell off in Q1. However, the entire market value of cryptocurrency has increased 7% since July.
Because of cascading liquidations, Thomas Dunleavy, senior market analyst at Messari, told Yahoo Finance that “we may have touched the ultimate bottom months ago.” “At this point, the market is down to the real believers alone. The majority of the vendors appeared to have left.
Beginning in May with the collapse of the $40 billion Terra ecosystem, followed by the hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, lenders Voyager, Celsius, and others, crypto deleveraged significantly as a result of central banks raising interest rates. Important cryptocurrency executives like Michael Moro of Genesis Trading, Jesse Powell, the CEO of Kraken, and Sam Trabucco of Alameda Research, a trading firm associated with FTX, have announced their resignations. Alex Mashinsky, CEO of Celsius Network, resigned as well, regretting how his continuing involvement throughout the company’s bankruptcy had “become an increasing distraction.”
With drawdowns of 60% for bitcoin and as high as 84% for other cryptocurrencies like Avalanche, bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are still among the risk investments that have lost the most money this year (AVAX). But in Q3, Bitcoin barely changed (+1%) compared to the Nasdaq (-2.7%), S&P 500 (-4%), and Dow (-5.4%) as of Friday’s market close.
The asset class, which is dominated by speculation about macro conditions, might continue to push cryptocurrency as a leading indication for how much risk investors are taking, even though bitcoin hasn’t demonstrated to be the inflation hedge that its advocates claimed it was. A cryptocurrency rally is by no means a guarantee, but it is always a decent leading indicator, according to Farrell.
According to Pranav Kanade, portfolio manager at VanEck, the performance of cryptocurrencies in the current bear market does not feel as dire as it did in other downturns. “It wasn’t apparent that the space was going to survive in the 2018 to 2019 bad market,” Kanade added. There is a sense of inevitable change in the ecosystem this time around as the market decelerates from its peak in December.
Kanade noted that the ability of crypto teams to draw more users to different blockchains will determine if cryptocurrency investing progresses beyond speculative levels. Additionally, blockchains need to grow their throughput in order for such apps to function (transactions per second).
According to him, less than 50 basis points of all global assets are made up of cryptocurrency, and there are currently 2.5 million daily users of blockchains. “But there are more than 4 billion smartphone users. Daily active users must increase for market caps to increase.
Even if Ethereum’s Merge upgrade had no effect on scaling throughput, the market saw it as a positive development. Ether’s (ETH-USD) performance since July has surpassed that of bitcoin and the majority of other assets, rising 26% from $1,057 on July 1 to $1,339 on Friday afternoon.
It’s now a race to be the first because we know how many of these chains, like Ethereum, Solana, and Cosmos, will operate, according to Kanade. David Hollerith is a senior correspondent for Yahoo Finance who focuses on the stock market and cryptocurrency.