Posts by Rod David
Bitcoin thoughts… And some weekend price parameters.
I don’t know when the Cryptocurrency top happens, but I know why it does.

Futures launches were discounted.
WHERE WE ARE…
CBOE launched futures on Bitcoin two weeks ago. CME launched its contract one week later. Bitcoin had already been in a rally, often turning exponential and occasionally crashing. The most impressive stretch came in anticipation of the futures launch. A 4-day 24% drop from 7,800 to 5,900 had recovered to attack 20,000 into the CBOE launch.
Futures. Professionals. Price discovery. Bitcoin promptly dropped 31% to 13,500. All of which was recovered into the CME launch. More professionals. More price discovery. Another drop. Bigger, much bigger… 47% to 10,400.

Dual spikes seldom hold.
That morning as the decline was breaking under 14,000, I noted during my morning Market Tour that the leg’s low would be a 10,000 handle. That was Friday. Its reaction reached 16,000 Saturday afternoon. And I would have loved to sell what I had bought Friday morning (above 11,000 by the time I could act). But Bitcoin purchase settlement runs much slower than Bitcoin trends, which is now in a reversal to 13,700.
The CBOE-CME launches formed a “double top.” The pattern all but requires eventually being retested, if not also broken by the previous trend resuming. That’s after probing under their interim low is done — everything before that having been noise. Meanwhile, the decline has been bouncing on spikes, which don’t form durable bottoms, projecting to potentially lower lows with an 8,000-handle. That next low would be more difficult to recover, let alone to resume the rally, since this pattern would have created a massive supply overhang. That said, bouncing above 15,700 would start to suggest a bigger bounce is developing, perhaps even a new rally leg.
WHERE WE ARE…
It’s not fair to call Bitcoin a bubble. Not unless also calling it a series of bubbles. In the singular, “bubble” implies a finality that Bitcoin has eluded. Each individual bubble is the natural process of over-saturating the currently available supply of buyers. Usually, buyers would be considered demand, and Bitcoin the supply. However, the inverse better explains Bitcoin’s behavior. The normal supply:demand equation isn’t invalid,

TRTC got a little ahead of itself.
it doesn’t fully characterize Bitcoin’s relationship to the investment marketplace.
We’ve seen this before, most recently with the Cannabis sector. I was the first professional technical analyst following the sector in late 2013 when its several dozen pink sheet and OTC stocks had already doubled and tripled from near nothingness. Many would go on to double and triple again, and those were the under-performers. The gains were produced not by corporate results, but by exponentially rising demand for their stock. Exponentially rising prices attract attention, and more demand feeds the vicious circle for more price rises.
Investors weren’t motivated by a desire to own shares in companies having no revenue growth, of which most had none at all. Generally, buyers weren’t typical investors. A not insignificant portion were seasoned traders,

VAPE fooled ’em twice.
but many more buyers could call Cannabis stocks their first stock purchase. Many of the first-timers were so fortunate to be so early to such a substantial rally because they shared another trait in common. They were the product’s customer base.
Sound familiar? With very few exceptions, Cannabis stocks were penny stocks, if not sub-penny stocks. The general investor marketplace didn’t seek out these issues. Rather, Cannabis stocks were seeking out new buyers. I wouldn’t dare say they were wrong, but I also wouldn’t call them prepared. I went on record during the first week of April 2014 to call a top for the sector, and the words seemed like gibberish to many. Few seemed to accept that trends could end, and far fewer seemed to have any experience with that natural occurrence.
Along the way up many new companies began trading shares in the Cannabis sector.
This continued during a good portion of the way down, too, as deals were already in the works. Which brings us back to Bitcoin. Which is still better known than other “Cryptocurrencies” Ethereum and Litecoin, but not much. All of which are better known than Iota, Monero, and Dash. And I’ll wager that more than two-thirds of their buyers can’t define “Blockchain,”most of whom don’t care.
Big name investors announcing new funds for Crypto investment add dimensions to the process that the Cannabis sector’s penny stocks never could. The new funds ARE the liquidity that penny stocks couldn’t provide. But that won’t change the sector’s general direction, and may slow the process of letting the currencies make their bottoms. Bitcoin’s current pullback / plunge is a not-unique reminder that the ultimate scalability is irrelevant, when compared to the pace of each interim adoptive leg. Those interim legs are interrupted by organic checks-and-balances that contain growth’s pace, while rewarding earlier adopters, and punishing late believers.

GWPH outperformed, for a reason.
WHERE WE’RE GOING…
Most of the questions I had posed before futures launched have been answered. I suspected that the derivative would both siphon serious and institutional Bitcoin buyers, while also diverting speculative activity to other Cryptocurrencies. They’re all down now, but “altcoins” such as Ethereum and Litecoin continued their rallies. We got to see a trading halt when Bitcoin had plunged Friday morning. Whether or not the cause, the plunge did stop. And now we’ve seen how Bitcoin behaves while futures don’t trade during the weekend. Very volatile.
About that halt, though. This is not a new device. We have decades of experience to infer that halts create artificial extremes, eventually retested if not also broken. Bitcoin et al have bounced considerably since Friday morning, also known as a correction. Even if the bounce were to get bigger, I suspect it will only be temporary. Drawing from experience with the Cannabis sector, I think we can also equate Bitcoin to GW Pharmaceuticals (GWPH), one of a handful of blue-chip players in the sector. It participated to some degree and duration with the sector’s decline, but held up well. Many of the other players are still getting shaken out.
We’re also going to see how tax enforcement affects the sector. Enforcement, and deferral. My suspicion is that futures have been sold in many cases to hedge exposure while deferring a taxable sale until next year. Next year, as in midnight January 1. Tax reform forecloses on the option of converting Bitcoin tax-free into other alt-coins. All of which applies to the U.S. and all of which foreign participants are aware — and have stepped back themselves from buying ahead of the selling pressure.
Perhaps the Christmas break will end with Bitcoin futures re-opening limit down or limit up. Then we’ll get to see whether that contributes to frenzy in that direction. Meanwhile, I’ve added daily coverage of Cryptocurrencies to my daily Market Tour and Market Wrap recordings, as well as reviewing interesting action intraday in the chaRTroom. That coverage will be expanded in 2018… Enjoy!
Market Wrap (recording & summary)
Merry Christmas!
Thursday night’s bounce had failed already before Friday’s open. Which Friday’s open and morning exploited by breaking down from 2688.00 to attack 2682.00. That was the morning. Sponsorship for trending down was difficult to gather, so it didn’t. Sponsorship to recover was unnecessary, so it did. Bouncing recovered 2688.00 coming out of the bias environment. The balance of the session fluctuated there. No action.
Trending back down Tuesday would still target 2679.00 and 2675.50. but the drop would no longer be done a constrained context. Still unlikely to trend down, but more capable. Gapping up above 2692.50 is probably the only path higher, but it could be satisfied quickly at new highs up to 2703.00.
As I pointed out in my previous blog post, Bitcoin could be in for more selling this weekend. I’ll update the blog with any relevant observations. Meanwhile, have a safe and Merry Christmas…
Rod
- Details and other markets coverage are discussed in the post-market Wrap recording here.
- Monitor overnight Globex trading in the chaRTroom here.
Daily Spot…
A daily summary of high-profile members of several complexes… View a more detailed discussion of each chart at the end of today’s Market Wrap.
Eurodollar Mar Contract (EC, ETF: (FXE, UUP))
Thoroughly testing 1.1930 as support Thursday allowed little room or time for delaying its break, if the rally is being reversed. Probing lower overnight was recovered, as was probing lower Friday morning. Absent a lower close, the rally becomes likelier to extend to 1.2000.
Gold Feb Contract (GC, ETF: (GLD))
Extending the rally Friday probed its 1277.50-1280.50 resistance, which might delay the 1283.50 target, but the rally remains intact.
Silver Mar Contract (SI, ETF: (SLV))
Thursday’s pullback proved to be irrelevant to the rally which resumed Friday. Attacking 16.50 requires that pullbacks hold 16.35-16.40 to maintain the rally’s momentum.
30-year Treasury Mar Contract (US, ETF: (TLT))
Ranging narrowly Friday morning never threatened to resume Thursday’s recovery attempt or reject it. Now two sessions have failed to bounce from Wednesday’s plunge, suggesting that its low will be retested before any credible recovery can form.
Crude Oil Feb Contract (CL, ETF: (USO, USL) (UWTI-long, DWTI-short))
Friday morning’s gap down was recovered, completing a perfect record of a similar template all week. And it finally extended to fill the 2-week old opening gap up at 58.50, which Thursday’s peak had stopped pessimistically short of completing. That’s enough pessimism to expect a less restrained optimistic surge before the next downleg could be credible.
Natural Gas Jan Contract (NG, ETF: (UNG, UNL))
Gapping up slightly was enough to immediately recover the 2.61 objective that this week’s dip has been testing. But the price action doesn’t qualify as a bottom, nor does it reverse the trend back up. The prior Friday’s 2.58 low remains vulnerable to being tested before recovering 2.71 would launch a new upleg.
Mid-day Update… And Bitcoin thoughts.
Backwards day: Cryptos are jealous of stocks.
Neither bias signal was touched as this afternoon triggered no-bias. Remember that this is Friday afternoon, ahead of a three-day holiday weekend. No matter the attraction(s) below and rejection of the overnight rally; no matter the attraction above and the inability to decline; Friday afternoons are historically vulnerable — if not likely — to fluctuate narrowly into the close. This morning’s choppy open does keep open the door to more volatility than normal, but that would be more of an exception.
Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrency holders are jealous.
Bitcoin’s plunge today is a not-unique reminder that the ultimate scalability is irrelevant compared to the pace of each interim adoptive leg. Organic checks-and-balances within a system are entirely capable of containing growth’s pace, rewarding earlier adopters, punishing late believers, and finding the lower price that can start the next cycle toward scale.
The third element has been proved repeatedly by past Bitcoin “crashes.”
BTC rallied sharply during the 1-2 weeks preceding CBOE futures launch two weeks ago. Anticipation was more reserved as it ranged sideways since CME futures launched this week. I had already posed the question whether the next significant upleg would be delayed until the pre-launch surge is corrected. This morning’s plunge seems to be the answer.
Before either futures contract launched, I had also noted that they would enhance price discovery. Also that the discovery could limit the upside. In fact, other observations during the past two weeks included alternative Crypocurrencies extending their own rallies. My preferences were Litecoin and Ethereum, but those became overshadowed by late-gainers like Monero, Iota and Ripple. For now, these were the biggest beneficiaries of Bitcoin and its futures.
They’re all down sharply, so divergence is flooded by the one tide, which is either rising or falling. The tide was rolled this week by Litcoin’s founder selling out, and tax treatment clarification in the tax reform bill. I’ve previously described the futures hedge that larger holders might be using to delay their taxable gain — we’ll see what happens at midnight January 1st.
Meanwhile, this current downleg originates from a retest of the recent high, which had preceded futures launch. Dipping back down to their interim low was only noise. The actual correction began under the interim low — that’s barely 24 hours old. Could another downleg be lying dead ahead? And if that’s a low, or even the low, another unbridled upleg isn’t likely. This pattern often leaves a supply overhang.
This morning’s plunge bottomed soon after futures were halted. My pre-open Market Tour had pointed to a 10,000-handle for a low, and its eventual test has reacted up to attack 14,000. Clearly the futures halt was a catalyst. So, what happens this weekend when futures don’t trade, but Bitcoin does? If the correction isn’t already done, and no halt is impending, another downleg could easily test 8,000 – 9,000.
I’ve added daily coverage of Cryptocurrencies to my daily Market Tour and Market Wrap recordings, as well as reviewing interesting action intraday in the chaRTroom. That coverage will be expanded in 2018… Enjoy!
Look ahead: Economic Calendar – for Mon Dec 25, 2017
A midday look ahead in preparation for economic reports and events scheduled for the next trading day.
Highlights: Merry Christmas! Markets are closed Monday, without any Globex session Sunday night. Globex does re-open in the evening.
Kids open gifts under the tree
6:00 AM ET
Globex regular open
6:00 PM ET
