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Bitcoin
bust like 2000 tech crash but on steroids: Morgan Stanley - 20th March 2018



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There
have been three waves of weakness since Bitcoin peaked in December. Photo: Bloomberg
Bitcoin
has long been compared to the dot-com bubble. Morgan Stanley says its recent moves
are similar to the tech boom and bust, but on steroids. Bitcoin's
recent moves almost mirror that of the Nasdaq Composite Index in the lead-up to
and aftermath of 2000, but at 15 times the speed, Morgan Stanley said. The Nasdaq
climbed 278 per cent in 519 days in the rally leading up to its high in March
2000, while Bitcoin soared 248 per cent in 35 days in the last leg of the rally
to its $US19,511 high in December, according to the report. There
have been three waves of weakness since Bitcoin peaked in December, with prices
falling between 45 and 50 per cent each time, before rebounding. The Nasdaq's
bear market from 2000 had five price declines, averaging a similar 44 per cent. The
bear market also looks similar on the way up. There have been two Bitcoin bear
market rallies of 43 per cent on average, while the Nasdaq bear market rallies
averaged 40 per cent. Bear
markets are nothing new for the first decentralised digital currency. Since the
coin's creation in 2009 there have been four bear markets with price declines
ranging from 28 per cent to 92 per cent. From the December peak to the most recent
low on February, Bitcoin's price fell by 70 per cent, "nothing out of the
ordinary", Morgan Stanley said. The
previous Bitcoin bear markets have last five months on average, after rallying
for two to three months, but "the small number of historical examples and
variability of each of the bear markets make it difficult to assume that the current
bear market may take the same time period," Morgan Stanley strategist Sheena
Shah wrote. All
the past bitcoin bear markets have seen rising trading volumes at the trough relative
to the peak, while rallies prior to most bear markets have seen falling trading
volumes, according to the report. Since December 2017, Bitcoin trade volumes have
risen by almost 300 per cent, the report said. "Rising
trade volumes are thus not an indication of more investor activity but instead
a rush to get out," Shah wrote. (Bloomberg) 
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