(Warning: Long text ahead )In some threads (in other forum sections) I have already written that one of the explanations I had for the last price jump up to 10.000 USD at the beginning of November was a run on Bitcoin coming from Argentina. As some may know, in Argentina, at the end of October forex restrictions came into place, creating a demand for alternative ways to get (supposedly) "hard" currencies like the US dollar. One of these ways is buying Bitcoin and later selling them for USD.
In this case, the mechanism driving up the price could have been the following one:
- Argentines buy Bitcoin at Coinbase and other similar exchangers with credit cards, with the intentions to buy US dollars with them afterwards.
- Their native currency (Pesos) are exchanged into dollars by their bank in Argentina, and then the dollars were used to buy the Bitcoins at Coinbase. This drove up the BTC/USD price, as from the point of view of Coinbase, USD were used to buy the BTC.
- That run may have caused "only" a $300 or $500 increase, but created an artificial sentiment change, and other people begun to buy, at the same time shorts were liquidated, leading to the crazy $3000 spike from $7.5K to $10K.
- The Argentines now began slowly to sell their Bitcoins for US dollars, but most likely they saw that the BTC price was increasing, so they waited some time, and that didn't affect the bull run. The price return to the previous values we're seing now could be actually that Argentines and those who fell into the "bull trap" are selling the coins again, because otherwise fundamentals have not changed.
Now at November 1, the Argentine government has restricted the policy again, requiring permission from the Central Bank to buy crypto-values with credit and debit cards (because of the demand for dollars that creates in the local forex market), and thus the "Coinbase method" is closed.
However, there is obviously another way: they can also buy Bitcoins at the local market. This lead to a
crazy price jump at Argentine coin websites, up to $12.000 and more.
Well, finally, the question I wanted to be answered:
Could a massive demand increase from an "isolated local market" like Argentina, where only the local currency BTC market remains intact, influence the Bitcoin price in US dollars? And:
Would it lead to upward or downward pressure?We can see two different scenarios:
First scenario: Argentines buy Bitcoin at local market and
hodl them, at least for a while.
1) First, this means that at local currency exchanges, price goes up, because the supply cannot satisfy the demand.
2) But if the premium is high enough, even if the Argentine Peso isn't an attractive currency, some will see an opportunity for arbitrage: they will speculate that it will lower at local exchanges if supply increases. Their sell orders increase the Bitcoin supply at the local exchanges. The Bitcoins used for that could come from other arbitrage markets, and thus the supply at the other markets will lower. As arbitrage markets tend to be connected, this movements could
drive the price up.
3) The "satisfied" Argentines will now be inside the crypto market and won't sell for a while.
4) Meanwhile, the speculators who bought the Pesos, will wait for the price to become attractive (lower than they sold) at the Argentine local market, and then re-buy, completing the arbitrage operation. If they are successful, they could have got more BTC out of the operation than they sold initially. Or at least they could have "equalized" the price increase due to step 2.
In this scenario,
we do have upward pressure. Steps 3 and 4 are neutral for the USD price, but step 2 takes away BTC supply from the USD/BTC market.
Second scenario: Argentines buy Bitcoin at local market and exchange it
rapidly to dollars.
In this scenario, phases 1) and 2) are similar. But then it would change:
3) Argentines sell the Bitcoins to USD. This would result in a downward price trend.
4) would be equal to scenario 1, only the local market would be affected.
In this scenario, we have upward (step 2) and downward pressure (step3) at the same time, neutralizing themselves.
This should have no price effect.
Now, as we can think of that at least some Argentines would opt for HODL, then an Argentine demand increase on price should have always positive influence on all exchange rates including BTC/USD, even if their currency is "isolated" from the rest of the world.
There could also be a "delayed" effect like in the situation I described at the start of the post. Argentines could buy, leading to a shortage of supply, and sell to USD later than expected, because they see the price starts to increase and want to "ride the wave". In this case, we could even expect a similar jump like in late October. Obviously only if the "run" is massive enough.
What are your opinions?
PS: If the first scenario becomes reality, then I predict a Bitcoin recovery in early December
(Hint: government change.)