[ ... ] comical hunt for "causes" of local price increases, but this one is too good to pass on:
Current price is the result of "three bubbles", starting Jan 2013?
So the entire trading history of late 2010 to late 2012, when price discovery was truly bootstrapped, with maybe the first major milestone being dollar parity, is just a historical footnote? No effect on price today?
Prices do not move on their own, by looking at their past history, without any external causes. Apple stock goes up or down because of their current products and marketing, not because of what its price did 5 or 20 years ago.
I wonder how the poor BTC price managed to survive 2009 without going insane. Imagine having to decide whether to go up or down, every single day, without even one year of past history to tell it what to do.
Seriously, the previous history of bitcoin (and not just of its price) certainly influenced those 3 events, especially since they appear to have been mostly the opening of short-term
speculative markets (as opposed to communities of computer nerds, as in 2009, or people using bitcoin for payments, as may have been the case of some previous bubbles). Presumably, many of the people who bought coins in those three events did so because they saw those multi-year trend extrapolations and believed them. But even they surely were more impressed by the price increase in the previous year than by what happened in the previous years.
The events before 2013 also prepared the ground by soaking up the most part of the 14 million coins, leaving a relatively small amount for short-term speculators to play with; so that the entry in 2013 of N new traders in the game would have a much larger effect on prices than it would have had otherwise. And, granted, many of the long-term investors who are holding the bulk of those older coins may do so because they believe in that multi-year TA, too.
However, the price got from 140$ to 800$ not because of some mysterious "multi-year trend force" pulled it up, but because the Chinese speculators discovered bitcoin and bough it en masse; and it fell from 800$ to the present 350$ not because of some even more mysterious "correction force", but because the Chinese government policies have been driving most of those speculators away. It can't get more obvious than that.
Three discrete events causally determine today's price. Got it.
Great. You will see that it will all begin to make sense from now on.
Too bad that it makes the price nearly impossible to predict. Lines on charts cannot tell whether Bitcoin will be the next TelexFree in Brazil, or whether the US government will change its mind and decide to ban it...