Cryptocurrency Bull Market Is Far From Over

 | Jan 17, 2022 11:37

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • An ugly start to 2022
  • Volatility is the hallmark of the asset class
  • Inflation is not going away anytime soon and will continue to erode fiat currency values
  • Fintech and inflation - Cryptos provide an alternative
  • Bitcoin and Ethereum will find bottoms - The bull market is not over

The US Federal Reserve abandoned the characterization of rising inflation as “transitory” at the December FOMC meeting. After President Biden nominated Chairman Powell for a second term, and in the aftermath of the latest consumer price index data, the Fed accelerated tapering quantitative easing, setting the stage for liftoff from a zero percent Fed Funds rate as early as the March 2022 FOMC meeting.

In the early days of 2022, the central bank has gone back and forth about reducing its balance sheet. Still, the December FOMC minutes reflected that moving from quantitative easing to quantitative tightening is possible over the coming months.

Inflation weighs on fiat currency values as it erodes purchasing power. The declines in the dollar, euro, pound, yen, and other fiat currencies that derive their value from the full faith and credit in the governments that issue legal tender is not readily apparent when measuring one foreign exchange instrument versus another. However, the fiats have lost value when measured against stocks, commodities, real estate, and cryptocurrencies in 2021.

Cryptocurrencies are an alternative to other means of exchange that reflect a libertarian economic ideology. While central banks, treasuries, monetary authorities, and governments can expand and tighten monetary policy to impact the money supply, cryptocurrencies are different. Crypto values depend on supply and demand established by market participants without government interference. Therefore, inflationary pressures likely caused the over 180% rise in the asset class’s market cap in 2021.

Bull markets rarely move in a straight line, and corrections can be swift and brutal. In a volatile asset class like cryptos, the price action has been nothing short of head-spinning, and the cryptocurrency asset class has started 2022 on a bearish note.

h2 An ugly start to 2022/h2

The leading cryptocurrencies and the asset class’s market cap began falling on Nov. 10 and continued to move lower so far in 2022.