Author

Topic: Is Bitcoin at the Mercy of Central Banks? (Read 1303 times)

legendary
Activity: 3542
Merit: 1352
November 16, 2014, 08:29:48 AM
#8
There is no enough data to show the correlation between bitcoin and other assets.

Yep. Not enough data or statistics to further support his ideas about the correlation of bitcoin to other assets. Such a small time frame to make some conclusions, imo.
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
November 15, 2014, 04:18:02 PM
#7
There is no enough data to show the correlation between bitcoin and other assets.
I agree with this. It is especially true since there is only ~4 years worth of data for the price/value of bitcoin.

Also the BOJ is continuing to pursue QE because they are still experiencing very low inflation and are coming off a decade of deflation.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1538
yes
November 15, 2014, 04:55:04 AM
#6
There are direct ways as well.

Bangladesh Central Bank: Cryptocurrency Use is a 'Punishable Offense'
http://www.coindesk.com/bangladesh-outlaw-bitcoin-jail/

Honey badger.
hero member
Activity: 675
Merit: 500
November 14, 2014, 09:35:36 PM
#5
There are direct ways as well.

Bangladesh Central Bank: Cryptocurrency Use is a 'Punishable Offense'
http://www.coindesk.com/bangladesh-outlaw-bitcoin-jail/
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1000
November 14, 2014, 04:39:02 AM
#4
There is no enough data to show the correlation between bitcoin and other assets.

Exactly right, the person who wrote this article is trying to make correlations where there are none and incorrect ones at that, the stock markets and particularly the Nikkei are being pumped up with all the money the central banks are printing the idea that they've actually stopped is total bullshit otherwise we wouldn't be having these rises. They seem to have taken an interesting step and actually increased the printing somewhere and somehow and that they're keeping the interest rates low is also a sign of this.

I'm sure they'll be doing everything they can to make things look good at Christmas, but rest assured, I think the crash will be happening a lot earlier than I expected, probably early next year in the first quarter, they're really ramping things up right now. While certainly Bitcoin is going to be affected by the people rushing for a safe haven away from the hyperinflation going on over here they Bitcoin doesn't just rise 'because' something else rises, nothing does there have to be a sequence of events that lead to the trade volume for this to happen and the stock market crash that is coming will be it.

The reason Bitcoin is rising so early is because there are people like me who can already see it happening ;P Oh yeah and I don't know where the fuck he got 'exporting' deflation from I wasn't even aware of whether you could do that, oh and if the GOLD and USD chart comparison isn't a sign for you guys to get ready I don't know what is.
legendary
Activity: 1596
Merit: 1000
November 13, 2014, 06:41:55 PM
#3
There is no enough data to show the correlation between bitcoin and other assets.
newbie
Activity: 7
Merit: 0
November 13, 2014, 03:47:36 PM
#2
To the moon!
member
Activity: 65
Merit: 10
November 13, 2014, 03:40:32 PM
#1


This forum post will examine how decisions of central banks can impact Bitcoin’s price because of intricate correlations between asset classes.

Read on Medium: https://medium.com/@BTCsx/intermarket-analysis-bitcoin-676c4363e3c0
Visit our trading platform: https://btc.sx

The Butterfly Effect Begins in Washington & Tokyo
The US Federal Reserve recently ended quantitative easing (QE), and promised to keep interest rates “extraordinarily low” for an extended period of time.

However, the QE spotlight has now been placed on the Bank of Japan (BOJ). They have decided to increase their bond purchases by a third. Further, the BOJ is not only buying bonds, but also stocks and real estate. Meanwhile, the Japanese pension fund announced it will increase its allocation to domestic and foreign stocks.

The Bank of Japan’s Impact on USD

On the tail end of this, global stock markets roared to the upside. The Japanese stock market(Nikkei) has reached a 7 year high and blasted through 14 year old resistance; it looks poised for more gains and to end its 25 year bear market. This has lead to the Yen declining to a 7 year low — all as an attempt to make Japanese multinational corporations more competitive.




As a result of this, the BOJ is exporting deflation to the rest of the world and sending the USD to 5 year highs. According to the chart below, the USD is looking to break through major resistance.





The performance of the USD is most evident when compared to to other major currencies:





The Impact of USD Appreciation on Commodities

As commodities are priced in USD, they have been hit hard by the USD appreciation. In particular, energy, agriculture, and precious metals commodity groups have suffered the most.





Below is a chart of Gold overlayed with the USD since 2010. Although the USD weakens any commodity, it is worth taking a closer look at its relationship with gold, which has a .87 correlation with Bitcoin.





How Does This All Impact Bitcoin?

The last and final chart overlays Bitcoin with the S&P. Until August 2014, they moved in the same direction. But since then, they have decoupled and started moving in the opposite direction. This was around the time the USD starting making its big move to multi-year highs.

While these are small data-sets, we can still find patterns in global capital flow.

It appears that a major correction in the S&P or an easing of USD strength would result in a commodity rally. This would add more fuel to Bitcoin’s recent rally (November 2014). Hence, if the Federal Reserve did not end QE and the BOJ did not increase its purchases of bonds, stocks and real estate, Bitcoin’s current rally might have been more aggressive.

Another factor to consider is seasonal patterns. November/December has previously seen strong uptrends in both Gold and Bitcoin. Obviously, this pattern holds true with Gold for a much longer period of time. Regardless, we are still seeing Bitcoin repeat last year’s pattern, suggesting traders are suddenly accumulating ‘cheap coins’. This is despite the fact that Bitcoin has been under-performing since August 2014.

‘The bottom is in’ — probably. The last consideration traders should make is the successful re-test of $330. It was a classic re-test on low volume, which is what traders like see. It also validates the current run up. So far, Bitcoin’s latest bull run appears to be confirmed after the price pierced a key layer of resistance, which is indicated by Ichimoku clouds:



Written by George Samman, former Wall Street Portfolio Manager and Co-Founder and COO of BTC.sx
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