Q2 Cryptocurrency Review: It Was A Wild And Volatile Quarter; 4 Issues Ahead

 | Jul 05, 2021 05:22AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • New highs but a bearish quarter for cryptos
  • The leaders move in opposite directions
  • Dogecoin was no joke in Q2
  • Impressive rise in the number of tokens but dilution too
  • What’s ahead for the cryptos?

The second quarter of 2021 was an incredibly wild ride in the cryptocurrency asset class. Bitcoin, which was at five cents per token eleven short years ago, rose to over $65,000. The price of the leading cryptocurrency exploded before imploding.

Bitcoin reaching its peak on Apr. 14, the day that Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN) listed shares on NASDAQ. The stock rose to a high of nearly $430, giving the trading platform an almost $100 billion valuation. At the high, COIN was worth more than the CME and ICE—two established trading platforms. Bitcoin and COIN halved in value following the spike and blow-off highs.

Investors and traders were drawn to the crypto asset class as the magnetic forces of the unprecedented parabolic price action are powerful. The rally ran out of upside steam, leading to price carnage.

As we head into Q3, the libertarian form of money faces challenges, but devotees believe that the price correction is nothing more than a speedbump that creates another buying opportunity. Some opponents continue to believe cryptos are dangerous. Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett’s 97-year-old partner, called them “disgusting and contrary to the interests of civilization.”

Notwithstanding Munger's opinion, when it came to performance, the multi-year bullish trend continued, but the asset class lost value in Q2.

h2 New highs but a bearish quarter for cryptos/h2

While cryptocurrency prices exploded to new highs during Q2, the results were negative on a quarter-to-quarter basis. At the end of Q1, the asset class’s market cap stood at $1.978 trillion as prices were on the way higher, pushing the overall value north of the $2.4 trillion level, eventually reaching an overall market cap north of the $2.4 trillion level during Q2. However, on June 30, the market cap stood at the $1.447 trillion level, down 26.85% during the second quarter.

Bitcoin weighed on the market cap as the leading cryptocurrency dropped by 42.11% from Mar. 31 through June 30, 2021. Bitcoin traded to a high of over $65,500 per token during the quarter but closed just under the $35,000 level as it came to a close.

h2 The leaders move in opposite directions/h2

Bitcoin’s price explosion, that took it to a high on Apr.14, then turned into an implosion.