Quite a turn of events.
In April, YouTube told me about all these altcoins ready to boom in May and Twitter said the super cycle was about to begin.
In May, YouTube said the market peaked in April and Twitter said we’re in a bear market.
In June, everybody says the end is near, with some projecting bitcoin will go negative over the coming months.
Seems a little excessive to me.
(Yes, in early April, I did publish an article that Hacker Noon editors titled "Bitcoin’s Peak is Coming This Month." But that article was a thought piece projecting others' expectations of the market forward to its natural conclusion. Those expectations never materialized.)
According to expert analysts, crypto has spent 34 of the last 44 months in a bear market. We just finished a five-month bull market. Now it’s dead again.
I entered the crypto market 44 months ago.
For almost my entire crypto journey, I have known only destruction and folly.
How did I persist through those many months of hardship, waiting endlessly for bitcoin’s price to get back to its all-time high until finally, in December 2020, it poked its head above $20,000 for only a brief, beautiful moment?
I didn’t. For most of that “bear market,” bitcoin’s price went up.
Look at what bitcoin’s price has done since the beginning of 2019. I use the expert’s definitions of “bull” and “bear” markets to denote the epochs.
Yes, I skipped 2018. That was actually a true bear market, the long downfall from a true market cycle peak in December 2017.
We also saw true bear markets in 2011 and from 2014-2015.
In 2019, bitcoin’s price started the year at about $3,100 and ended the year at about $7,160—more than double where it started.
Is that a bear market? To be honest, I don’t know, I can’t keep it straight. Are you using the 200 DMA? Or the 50/200 death cross? Something about the 21 EMA? The slope of the price line?
Bear markets come at the end of market cycles, not in the middle of them.
Sometimes, bitcoin just goes up really fast. Too fast. After zooming, it takes a long time to settle before taking off again.
In fact, we’ve seen that happen more often in bull markets than in bear markets. Look at these bull market consolidations after big moves up:
While the experts would say those were bear markets, they don’t look like them on a price chart:
Ok, admittedly that 2020 drop looks brutal, but that’s a legit black swan event, even the S&P 500 looks like shit from February to July 2020. If you take that out, these consolidations look totally normal.
This month, I bought bitcoin for the first time since September 2020.
Why didn’t I buy bitcoin from October 2020 to April 2021?
Because I follow my plan for bitcoin’s bull market, and the plan didn’t give me an opportunity to buy until a few weeks ago.
My Plan for Bitcoin's Bull Market
Do you see the irony of that? The shame and deceit I’ve carried for over a year, since March 2020 when I created my plan for bitcoin’s bull market? How I’ve let down my readers and subscribers?
No?
Here it is:
I HAVE NEVER BOUGHT BITCOIN DURING A BULL MARKET!
My plan is false advertising. I'm lying when I call it a plan for the bull market.
There is no bull market!
That is, if the experts are right.
It does seem odd to have a portfolio that’s 6x higher than my initial investment, seeing as I’ve never bought crypto during a bull market. Is this crypto thing supposed to work that way?
All kidding aside, bitcoin’s price went up for six straight months. That’s insane. Even bull markets need to take a break now and then. A few months of consolidation can do wonders for the overall health of the market.
We’ve seen consolidations of up to seven months in 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2019. Each time, all of those consolidations happened within a larger uptrend, though experts call some of those consolidations “bear markets.”
Anybody who bought during those times came out way ahead—at least 67% and up to 460% gains during the bear market, plus all the gains that came after it.
Opportunity abounds, but it's hard to get that from chasing parabolas or "treating" yourself to some bitcoin at each all-time high.
If this is another one of those bear markets that ends with bitcoin’s price higher than where it started, I’m ok with that.
At least, I will be after I finish figuring out why these “bear markets” are such bad things in the first place.
Mark Helfman publishes the Crypto is Easy newsletter. He is also the author of three books and a top bitcoin writer on Medium and Hacker Noon. Learn more about him in his bio.
Originally published on Cryptowriter.