Bitcoin’s Manic-Depressive Past

 | Feb 10, 2017 07:49AM ET

h2 A vital lesson to learn from Bitcoin’s short, but violent history

Bitcoin (BTC) crashed. Again. Yesterday, the cryptocurrency fell from as high as $1075 to below $914, bringing back the memories from the disastrous selloff we saw in the first days of 2017. It looks like each time Bitcoin rises significantly, a violent reversal follows. Obviously, the digital currency is prone to crashing. Since it happens so often, we should be able to find a pattern, right? We need a pattern, explaining that mania-panic phenomenon. The Elliott Wave Principle has a suggestion.

According to the theory, the direction of the trend can be identified by recognizing a five-wave impulse. The third wave of the impulsive pattern is usually the longest. However, sometimes, usually when we talk about a commodity, whose supply is theoretically limited, the fifth wave might extend. It happens because people’s greed during this last phase of the pattern makes them believe the world is going to run out of the thing in question, which in turn leads to a completely irrational price surge.

Bitcoin’s supply is limited not only in theory, but in reality as well. The maximum amount of bitcoins that could be mined is 21 million and roughly 70% of that has already been produced. This makes bitcoin the perfect field for a mania, or an extended fifth wave, to occur. The problem is that the fifth wave, extended or not, is just a phase of the larger impulse and we know that every impulse is followed by a correction in the opposite direction. So once the mania is taken to the maximum extreme, where it can no longer continue, the exact opposite emotion takes over people’s minds. The emotion is fear and its extreme condition is panic. In other words, what we really need to look for is an extended fifth wave followed by a decline of similar magnitude. On bitcoin’s charts that is not very hard to find.