Cryptos Land On Mainstream Financial Events

 | Mar 16, 2018 07:18AM ET

One of the most difficult aspects of trading cryptocurrencies is the reactionary nature of the market. Most of the news events that influence prices are the type of things that are difficult to foresee.

In traditional finance, we know in advance when there will be an economic data releasee. Things like inflation figures, GDP data, interest rate decisions are all scheduled in advance and we can even look at an economic calendar to understand the timing and expectations of the event.

Though we may still be a while away from a comprehensive crypto calendar, we are seeing that as we go there is more awareness of future events. For example, on Wednesday we had a Congressional Hearing about cryptocurrencies that traders were able to tune in to.

On Monday and Tuesday, the first of five G20 meetings will be held in Argentina and will be a primary focus of traditional finance players. It has recently been confirmed that representatives from Japan will use this meeting to address cryptocurrencies, specifically to provide ideas on how to limit the use of cryptos for laundering money.

Japan is currently the world's leader when it comes to cryptocurrency usage and regulations after completely legalizing Bitcoin on March 31st of last year. So their opinions in this matter carry a lot of weight with other world leaders.

More intense crypto talks are expected at the November G20 meeting, and with the price of Bitcoin and other cryptos more than 50% off their all-time highs, crypto-skeptics are getting louder, so seeing one of their main concerns being addressed on the largest global financial stage is a very reassuring thought.

Today's Highlights

Ritual Suicide

Therein Lies the Rub

Bitcoin Lightening

Please note: All data, figures & graphs are valid as of March 16th. All trading carries risk. Only risk capital you can afford to lose.

Traditional Markets

It's not often that we lead this section of the update with Japan but it is the world's third-largest economy and they're going through a bit of a rough patch which could potentially lead to some market movements that are worth highlighting.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is having a bad month right now. A suicide note left by a government official revealed that he was forced to rewrite several official documents to cover up the Prime Minister's connection with a particular sale of land.

Though political analysts are saying that the Prime Minister himself is safe from the scandal, the Finance Minister Taro Aso is clearly in the thick of it and will be sitting out the above mentioned G20 meetings.

Why this matters to the markets

Abe and Aso, along with the Bank of Japan, have been acting since 2012 to proactively devalue theJapanese Yen. A weak Yen policy is considered a cornerstone of 'Abenomics'.

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The idea is to keep the currency weak in order to promote exports. The weaker the Yen, the more foreigners will be able to afford products that are made in Japan. And with Japan exporting more than they import, this policy makes a lot of sense.

In this chart, we can see the Yen's massive depreciation since Abe was elected in September 2012.

(Remember, this is the USD/JPY pair so an upward movement on the graph indicates a weaker Yen.)