Mahi Sall, Advisor, Fintech-Bank Partnerships, Payments and Financial Inclusivity
January 25th, 2023
Venturebeat | Jeremy Epstein | July 13, 2017
Anyone following the cryptocurrency market over the past few months has seen the spectacular rise and pretty dramatic fall of the value of an Ether. The currency rose from the $100 range to the $400 range from May to June; and from June to July we’ve seen it drop back down to the $200 range. The question is, why is this happening now?
With over $500 million worth of Ether raised in initial coin offereings (ICOs) during June alone and a feature on the cover of Forbes, the market has reached fever pitch. What we are now witnessing is the other side of this phenomenon.
Here are four reasons for the drop:
These projects have costs. And, for now, those costs are in fiat currency.
While you can buy some things with Ether and Bitcoin, most of the expenses of running an organization and the expenses of the people who work in those organizations still happen in boring old dollars, euros, and yen.
Let’s assume for the moment that the startup projects are not scams or pump and dump schemes (I’ll get those a bit later). Still, these projects have to get actual money to pay for stuff and, thanks to blockchain, we can see it all happening. So when EOS decides to deleverage some of its ETH risk, everyone knows about it.
And when Tezos, which I predicted would raise $250 million (it was just a little bit under that), $232 Million: Tezos Blockchain Project Finishes Record-Setting Token Crowdsale, it will do what anyone does: reduce risk.
Scale this out to every project and assume for a moment that every ICO is going to take 10-20 percent of its ETH “off the table” and put it in fiat to avoid the “crash that everyone knew was coming, but didn’t know when,” and now you have $50-100 million worth of sell orders coming in at the same time. That’s a decent percentage of the market moving in one direction at once. And that’s just the ICOs from June.
But wait, as they say, there’s more.
Remember why all of these projects are raising money. For the most part, it’s to find talent to help build the vision.
The challenge? Blockchain technical talent is in ridiculously short supply. Combine that with very high demand and you have market forces that my nine-year-old can explain.
There’s a war for development talent, and it’s being fought at the cash register. The fiat cash register.
It is why one article recently proclaimed “Why Brave’s $35 Million ICO May Not Be Enough for a High-Tech Hiring Spree”
I’ll throw one other possibility out there. The advent of new types of investors in the space.
Over the past few months, we’ve seen an explosion in the value of the crypto-market. As a result, any money manager worth his/her salt wants to get “in on the action.” Everyone wants to be Olaf.
It’s not surprising that Forbes recently profiled 15 New Hedge Funds that Want In On 84,000% Returns. That’s just the tip of the iceberg.
The more “professional” traders are thrilled with month/month returns that ETH and the others are yielding, so naturally they are going to take profits as well. They don’t have the HODL (Hold on For Dear Life) perspective that many of the O.G.’s (Original Gangsters) in the space have.
The National Crowdfunding Association of Canada (NCFA Canada) is a cross-Canada non-profit actively engaged with both social and investment crowdfunding stakeholders across the country. NCFA Canada provides education, research, leadership, support, and networking opportunities to over 1500+ members and works closely with industry, government, academia, community and eco-system partners and affiliates to create a strong and vibrant crowdfunding industry in Canada. Learn more at ncfacanada.org.
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