Cryptocurrencies: Approach With Caution

 | May 16, 2022 07:45AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Looking great on rallies and awful on dips
  • Cryptos lack historical perspective and identity
  • Speculators are on the sidelines
  • Liquidity has declined - stablecoins have not been stable
  • The potential for higher volatility leads to false breakouts and breakdowns

The cryptocurrency asset class is a dozen years old. Over the past 12 years, cryptos have established a reputation that has taken them on a path toward more mainstream assets, but they have a long way to go.

As of the end of last week, the asset class’s market cap stood at the $1.235 trillion level. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), the world’s largest publicly traded company, had a value of over $2.38 trillion.

Cryptos are the revolutionary means of exchange that are the children of blockchain technology and represent the evolution of fintech. They are also a political movement as they take control of the money supply from governments and return it to individuals, appealing to libertarian ideologues.

For traditionalists, they are, as Charlie Munger recently said, “a threat to civilization.” Emotions on both sides run high and are likely a bit overdone.

Moreover, the incredible gains in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and many other cryptos created a speculative frenzy that reached a crescendo on Nov. 10, 2021, when they rose to record highs.

The bullish party ended on that day as the two asset class leaders made bearish key reversal patterns on the daily charts and steadily declined, reaching lows on Jan. 24, 2022.

Since then, the digital currencies have been sitting closer to the low than the mid-November high. The asset class is searching for an identity, with liquidity drying up over the past weeks.

The potential for false breaks higher and lower is rising in the current environment.

h2 Looking great on rallies and awful on dips/h2

In 2021, when Bitcoin was on its way to nearly $70,000 per token, many bullish analysts forecasted the leading cryptocurrency would reach the $100,000 level before the end of last year. They were wrong.