The cryptocurrency
bear market is winding down and is in its final stage, the
accumulation phase, according to a report from digital assets fund
Adamant Capital published on April 18.
Per the report, the
accumulation phase is expected to bring bitcoin (BTC) to trade in the
corridor between $3,000 and $6,500 until the new bull market gains
ground. The researchers suggest that bitcoin whales are currently
accumulating the leading cryptocurrency which echoes the bear market
from 2014 to 2015.
The analysis
reportedly showed that most retail traders have left the current
market, while agnostic traders and long-term investors have become
dominant. That reportedly fits BTC volatility lows analysis, wherein
recent bitcoin 60 day volatility slumped below 5% — a level not
seen since late 2016. The report further explains:
“During the
accumulation phase, the market will trade in a range: the weak hands,
who are trying to get out of the market, take profit during rallies
and thus create the resistance, and the strong hands, looking to
accumulate, buy at the bottom of the range which eventually creates a
floor in the piece.”
Millenials are also
one of the key drivers of the cryptocurrency market growth, the
report says, as 92% of this generation does not trust banks and the
majority of bitcoin buyers are also millennials. The researchers
forecast that bitcoin will see mass adoption in the coming five
years, as well as become widely recognized as a portfolio hedging
instrument and reserve asset.
As previously
reported, research by blockchain-focused company Clovr revealed that
cryptocurrency investing is most popular among millennials earning
from $75,000 to $99,999 annually. Millenials are reportedly almost
twice as likely as any other generation to invest in digital
currencies, with 43 percent of men and 23 percent of women investing
in crypto.
Another poll by
crypto finance company Circle showed that 25 percent of millennials
said they are interested in purchasing digital currencies over the
next 12 months, which sets them apart from other generations by more
than 10 percent.
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