Heard of bitcoin's 'halving'? It's set to shake crypto markets in 2020
Send a link to a friend
[December 19, 2019]
By Tom Wilson
LONDON (Reuters) - If you're not a bitcoin
enthusiast, you probably haven't heard what's happening next year: It's
called the "halving", and it will cut production of the cryptocurrency
by 50%.
No one's in control of this process. It's a rule written into bitcoin's
underlying code by its pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto more than a
decade ago.
The event, expected in May 2020, slashes by half the number of new coins
awarded to bitcoin miners who provide global supply of the
cryptocurrency by solving complex maths puzzles.
That's a big change in a market worth about $120 billion where bitcoin
worth several billions dollars are created every year.
Players in the know are preparing for the sharp price gains and
volatility that have accompanied previous halvings, which happen roughly
every four years and act to both ensure the scarcity of bitcoin and keep
a cap on price inflation.
There are likely to be winners and losers. So market participants, from
bitcoin miners and traders, are trying to fathom how the next halving
might play out to gain an edge.
"This is the biggest question right now for most of the industry," said
Eyal Avramovich, chief executive of MineBest, a Warsaw-based company
that mines bitcoin.
The fracture to the production of bitcoin provides a reminder of one
reason why the decentralized digital currency has confounded regulation
and acceptance by mainstream finance: Its fate remains tied to arcane
technological factors.
In theory, if supply is cut and demand stays constant, prices rise. This
time around, seven crypto traders and miners interviewed by Reuters said
the May halving would probably lead to greater volatility and trading
volumes. However the cut to supply is liked to be more priced in than
previously, they said, with many traders already geared up for the
upcoming event.
MAKING MONEY FROM SWINGS
Bitcoin miners use high-spec computers to compete against other machines
in the crypto network, racing to add new "blocks" to the blockchain
ledger that underpins the cryptocurrency.
They are rewarded with a set number of bitcoin, currently 12.5. At
current rates of block creation, the next halving will take place in
May, when the number will drop to 6.25.
[to top of second column]
|
An employee works on Bitcoin mining computer as a PC screen shows
the fluctuations in Bitcoin exchange rates at Bitminer Factory in
Florence, Italy, April 6, 2018. Picture taken April 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi/File Photo
In the one-year periods after the two previous halvings, in November
2012 and July 2016, bitcoin rose around by 80 times and four times
respectively. It is not clear how much of these price gains was down
to the halving, versus with other factors.
This time around, bitcoin derivatives markets - still nascent -
point to higher volatility around the time of the halving, said Jeff
Dorman of Arca, a U.S. crypto investment firm.
Such volatility in bitcoin markets tends to benefit quantitative
hedge funds and high-frequency traders that seek to make money from
swinging crypto prices.
"For us, the event will be positive because it cause activity in the
market," said Ha Duong of Cambrial, an cryptocurrency investor in
Berlin.
But for miners that hold large inventories of bitcoin, volatility
can also be a hindrance. For them, stability of price gives greater
predictability for investment in new gear.
While bitcoin futures contracts allow miners to hedge the risk of
their inventories, there are currently few tools for them to
properly hedge against volatility, said Ricky Li, co-founder of
crypto trader Altonomy.
"If you want to long volatility, the options contracts available for
the market right now really do not have the tenor (length)," he
said.
"Right now all you can do is to just make sure your holdings risk,
your inventory risk, is hedged."
(Reporting by Tom Wilson; Editing by Pravin Char)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |