Was at $20,000 at one point.
Is at $4,440 right now.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/bi...ere-2018-11-20
Following a blistering 80% decline from its peak this year, the brutal drop in the price of bitcoin BTCUSD, +2.00% has market participants wondering what’s next for the No.1 digital currency.
A fresh bull run from here? Or look out below!
Given the a more than 20% drop over the past 36 hours, it might be the latter.
However, both camps are making their cases for the digital asset’s next move:
Read: Why bitcoin prices are staging a fresh collapse
The bitcoin cheerleaders
Tom Lee
One of the more prominent bitcoin bulls is Tom Lee, managing partner at Fundstrat Global Advisors. Lee, who held a year-end price target of $25,000 for bitcoin for the best part of the year, reduced it to $15,000 on Nov. 16.
In a research note, Lee said the depth of the decline has gone beyond market fundamentals. “While bitcoin broke below that psychologically important $6,000, this has led to a renewed wave of pessimism. But we believe the negative swing in sentiment is much worse than the fundamental implications,” he said.
Speaking on CNBC Tuesday, Lee admitted the recent decline “has definitely been a negative development.”
CNBC
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@CNBC
Bitcoin bull Tom Lee stands by his reduced year-end $15,000 target, despite prices falling to their lowest levels in more than a year. https://cnb.cx/2QZL3x5
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8:16 AM - Nov 20, 2018
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Bitcoin bull Tom Lee stands by his reduced year-end $15,000 target despite nosediving prices
Fundstrat's Tom Lee told CNBC he remains bullish on bitcoin and bets on a recovery soon despite prices falling to more than one-year lows.
cnbc.com
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Nigel Green
Another ultra bull is Nigel Green, founder and chief executive of U.K. consulting firm deVere group, said the two-day decline is a bargain investors don’t want to miss. “Savvy investors understand that digital currencies are the future of money and, as such, they will be capitalizing on the lower prices in order to build their portfolios and shore-up their positions,” he said.
Green said the selloff has fueled unnecessary criticism on the nascent technology. “Crypto cynics are using this current wave of volatility to knock digital currencies. Whether it is bitcoin, or any of the current generation of coins, or not, cryptocurrencies are here to stay,” he continued.
Anthony Pompliano
Another bitcoin bull, who believes the best trade at the moment is “long bitcoin, short bankers,” is Anthony Pompliano, the founder of Morgan Creek Digital.
In late August, Pompliano was a little more pragmatic, saying “we are likely to see bitcoin near $3,000 before we see Bitcoin at $10,000 again.”
Today, with bitcoin reeling anew, Pompliano admitted he was fielding an unusually high number of calls, but sought to ease their nerves by heading his morning research note with “Everyone breathe. The world is not ending.”
Read: Going bearish on humans may be the ‘trade of our generation,’ says Morgan Creek Digital founder
The bitcoin bashers
Nouriel Roubini
There’s no greater bitcoin critic than Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at New York University.
Roubini has labeled bitcoin a scam, a bubble and everything in between. With the price of bitcoin spiraling lower, Roubini has picked up his Twitter game.
The Turkish-born economist has been taking numerous shots at so-called HODLers—those who hold their bitcoin through thick and thin—and on Twitter this morning the professor asked if they were still “buying the dip.”
Nouriel Roubini
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@nouriel
Bitcoin Down 25% in less than a week. Almost 80% from peak. ETH down 90% from peak. And all other shitcoins down much more, 95% or more or dead. So for how long HODLing zealots will keep on "buying the dip" so their losses become 99.9% compounded? Serious question...
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3:34 PM - Nov 19, 2018
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Read: Dr. Doom says bitcoin represents the ‘mother of all bubbles’
‘You’re buying a lottery ticket and if it [bitcoin] proves to become a global standard on the level of a credit card or a currency then it will pay off’
—Kenneth Rogoff
Kenneth Rogoff
Kenneth Rogoff, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and now Harvard professor who in March told CNBC that bitcoin “will be worth a tiny fraction of what it is now,” adding that $100 is a lot more likely that $100,000 hasn’t changed his tune.
Speaking to MarketWatch, Rogoff said he remains very bearish on bitcoin, citing a lack of tolerance from regulators in dealing with anonymity as a hurdle too steep to climb for the nascent asset. The Harvard economist said transaction costs and a lack of comparative speed put it well behind traditional payment systems.
Rogoff said like most asset classes, a bitcoin surge is a nonzero probability. “You’re buying a lottery ticket and if it [bitcoin] proves to become a global standard on the level of a credit card or a currency then it will pay off,” he said.