Record highs predicted for bitcoin in 2016 as new supply halves
Comment of the Day

December 24 2015

Commentary by Eoin Treacy

Record highs predicted for bitcoin in 2016 as new supply halves

This article by Jemma Kelly for Reuters may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

The reason 2016 looks set to be different is that bitcoin's price is likely to be driven in large part by similar factors to a traditional fiat currency, following the age-old principles of supply and demand.
Instead of being controlled by a central bank, bitcoin relies on so-called "mining" computers that validate blocks of transactions by competing to solve mathematical puzzles every 10 minutes. In return, the first to solve the puzzle and thereby clear the transactions is currently rewarded with 25 new bitcoins, worth around $11,000 BTC=BTSP.

But when it was invented in 2008 by the mysterious "Satoshi Nakamoto", who has yet to be identified, the bitcoin program was designed so that the reward would be halved roughly every four years, in order to keep a lid on inflation. The next time that is due to happen is July 2016.
bitcoin was also designed to emulate a commodity by having a finite supply of 21 million bitcoins, which will be reached in around 125 years, up from around 15 million today. Hence, also, the use of the term "mining".

Daniel Masters, co-founder of Jersey-based Global Advisors' multi-million dollar bitcoin hedge fund, started his career as an oil trader at Shell in the mid-1980s and spent 30 years trading commodities before crossing over to bitcoin.

?Now he reckons the price of bitcoin could test its 2013 highs of above $1,100 next year and then pick up speed to rise to $4,400 by the end of 2017.

That would be due to a number of factors, Masters said, including an increased acceptance of payments in bitcoin by big companies and authorities, rapidly growing interest and investment in the "blockchain" technology that underpins bitcoin transactions, and also more demand from China as its currency weakens and the economy slows.

But taken in isolation, the halving of the mining reward will increase the price of bitcoin by around 50 percent from where it is now, Masters reckons. That is despite the fact that the halving of the reward has always been inevitable - a factor that would already have been accounted for in pretty much every other market.

Eoin Treacy's view

With the revaluation of bitcoin set for July 2016 we can anticipate hearing much more about the cryptocurrency in the next six months. 

Perhaps more important is that large banks are attempting to register patents so that they can use the blockchain as an incorruptible filing system for recording ownership of assets such as stocks and bonds as well as transactions. bitcoin may succeed or fail but the blockchain technology it rests on is almost certainly going to be commercialised because it represents such an enormous potential cost saving apparatus for the financial sector. 

bitcoin rallied in late October to complete this year’s base and continues to hold a progression of higher reaction lows. A sustained move below 300 would be required to question the medium-term upward bias. 

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