1. Home
  2. scott minerd

scott minerd

Guggenheim CIO Scott Minerd Warns of a Crypto ‘Washout’ Similar to the Internet Bubble

Guggenheim CIO Scott Minerd Warns of a Crypto ‘Washout’ Similar to the Internet BubbleGuggenheim Partners CIO Scott Minerd believes there is going to be a crypto washout similar to the internet bubble. “There’s another shoe to drop,” he warned. Nonetheless, the executive is confident that the crypto industry will move forward despite the collapse of crypto exchange FTX. Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Shares Crypto Outlook Guggenheim Partners Global Chief […]

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Discusses ‘Greatest Investing Opportunity’ — Warns Stocks Vulnerable to Further Declines

Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Discusses ‘Greatest Investing Opportunity’ — Warns Stocks Vulnerable to Further DeclinesThe chief investment officer of asset management firm Guggenheim, Scott Minerd, says that the current market has delivered “the greatest investing opportunity of a generation.” He also warned about some investments that he expects to decline further. Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd on ‘the Greatest Investing Opportunity of a Generation’ The chief investment officer (CIO) of Guggenheim […]

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Predicts Brutal Bitcoin (BTC) Collapse Down to ‘Ultimate Bottom’ – Here’s His Target

Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Predicts Brutal Bitcoin (BTC) Collapse Down to ‘Ultimate Bottom’ – Here’s His Target

Guggenheim Partners founder Scott Minerd expects Bitcoin (BTC) to keep ceding ground on the price charts now that it has repeatedly buckled at a key support level. In an interview with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin while attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Minerd discusses the possibility of Bitcoin even dropping below $10,000 if […]

The post Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Predicts Brutal Bitcoin (BTC) Collapse Down to ‘Ultimate Bottom’ – Here’s His Target appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Asset Manager Guggenheim Lowers Bitcoin’s ‘Real Bottom’ Price Prediction

Asset Manager Guggenheim Lowers Bitcoin’s ‘Real Bottom’ Price PredictionGuggenheim CIO Scott Minerd has made another prediction about where the price of bitcoin will be, a lower estimate from his previous “real bottom” price prediction. The chief investment officer (CIO) of Guggenheim Partners, Scott Minerd, returned last week with another bearish prediction for bitcoin. Minerd is also the chairman of Guggenheim Investments, the global […]

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Guggenheim CIO Predicts ‘Real Bottom’ of Bitcoin, Warns BTC Price Could Fall to $15,000

Guggenheim CIO Predicts ‘Real Bottom’ of Bitcoin, Warns BTC Price Could Fall to ,000The chief investment officer of asset management firm Guggenheim, Scott Minerd, thinks he knows where the real bottom of bitcoin’s price is. He warns that the price of the cryptocurrency could fall to the $15K level. Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd Sees Bitcoin Bottom The chief investment officer (CIO) of Guggenheim Partners, Scott Minerd, is back with […]

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Ethereum, altcoins risk more downside than Bitcoin if BTC losses $30K, warns analyst

According to an independent market analyst, altcoin holders face the risk of facing twice more losses if the Bitcoin price corrects by another 30%.

Altcoin traders and investors should look for cover if Bitcoin (BTC) undergoes major price declines.

So believes Filbfilb, an independent market analyst and co-founder of Decentrader trading suite. In a tweet published late Friday, the pseudonymous entity said a 30% crash in the Bitcoin market could prompt altcoins to drop twice as harder.

When Bitcoin consolidated between $50,000 and $60,000 in the March-May period, altcoins exploded. Similarly, the recent correction in the Bitcoin market, which witnessed the flagship cryptocurrency falling from circa $65,000 to as low as $28,000, also had altcoins crash; still, to the levels, they held as support when Bitcoin was stuck in the $50K-$60K range.

Bitcoin price vs. altcoin market cap. Source: TradingView, Filbfilb

Filbfilb noted that altcoins have been facing a so-called "catchup risk," hinting that even a small downside shift in the Bitcoin market could move altcoins twice lower. The statement appeared as Bitcoin prices plunged to $30,173 following a 15.58% week-to-date downside correction.

"[Altcoins], therefore, carry significantly more downside risk than Bitcoin with [BTC/USD] threatening lows," tweeted Filbfilb. "If bitcoin were to fall lower, losing another 30% worst case, I'd expect [altcoins] to correct to do 2x worse from here."

"If bitcoin were to fall lower, losing another 30% worst case, I'd expect alts to correct to do 2x worse from here."

Bitcoin's declines across May and June pushed down its year-to-date performance to 5.71%. Meanwhile, while top-cap altcoins fell in tandem, their YTD returns fared far better.  

For instance, Ether (ETH), the second-largest cryptocurrency, dropped by a little over 60% from its mid-April peak of $4,384. Nevertheless, its YTD returns came out to be 141% as of publishing time. Similarly, Dogecoin's YTD profits were 4,112% even after falling by almost 80% from its record high of $0.76.

Bitcoin YTD vs. altcoins YTD in 2021. Source: Messari

So it seems, altcoins provided better profit-taking opportunities to their holders than Bitcoin did. As a result, investors could offset their losses in the Bitcoin market by simply selling their altcoin profits for fiat and/or rotate the funds back into BTC.

Bitcoin and $20K

Of late, Bitcoin has been able to avoid a deeper pullback below $30,000 despite repeated attempts. 

Bitcoin consolidation continues inside the $30K-40K area. Source: TradingView.com

Many analysts, including Mercuryo founder Alexander Vasiliev, sees Bitcoin's bullish resilience as a signal that it would eventually breakout above $40,000 and rise to its previous high levels near $64,000 in the mid to long term.

However, some analysts who were previously bullish on Bitcoin have flipped their bias in the wake of the cryptocurrency's latest bearish correction.

For instance, Scott Minerd, the chief investment officer of the multi-billion dollar investment firm Guggenheim Partners, told CNBC on Friday that he expects Bitcoin to fall to $15,000.

In February, just as Bitcoin was tearing through $30,000-resistance, Minerd has predicted its price to hit $600,000.

Clem Chambers, the chief executive of financial analytics website ADVFN.com, also flipped bearish for Bitcoin, noting that Bitcoin could fall back towards $20,000 owing to capitulation sentiment. He wrote in his SeekingAlpha article:

"The next leg down looks to be here, and it will be the final big move down leading to a repeat of the crypto winter we have endured before."

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Guggenheim CIO Scott Minerd Predicts More Bitcoin Sell-Off but Remains Bullish Long Term

Guggenheim CIO Scott Minerd Predicts More Bitcoin Sell-Off but Remains Bullish Long TermThe chief investment officer of Guggenheim, Scott Minerd, has predicted more sell-off for bitcoin. He also warned that it will take a while for the cryptocurrency to return to its previous highs. However, in the long term, Minerd has predicted that bitcoin’s price could rise to $600K. Bitcoin Sell-Off to Continue, Minerd Says The chief […]

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Bitcoin’s epic $7.5 billion long squeeze just made BTC price more bullish — Here’s why

Not everyone is bearish after Bitcoin price dropped from $40,000 to $30,000 and back up again.

This Wednesday's price crash in the Bitcoin (BTC) spot market wiped about $7.56 billion worth of long-leveraged positions from cryptocurrency derivatives markets.

Leveraged bullish investors winded up around $7.5B in longs on Wednesday. Source: ByBt.com

The event marked the biggest bullish leverage wipeout since March 2020. Retail and institutional investors borrowed from leading exchanges to amplify their potential returns.

But a sudden reversal in the Bitcoin spot rates, reportedly led by Elon Musk's anti-Bitcoin tweets over the weekend and fueled by China's reiteration of a ban on crypto transactions, blew up bulls' leverage ratios. That led to a so-called liquidity cascade in the derivatives market.

In traditional markets, investors use cash as collateral to back their leveraged bets. Nevertheless, the cryptocurrency industry enables Bitcoin-backed collaterals. So, when the BTC rates fall, their downside move catches bullish traders — ones with leveraged positions on higher BTC rates — on the wrong foot.

The event led many analysts to simmer down their bullish bias in the Bitcoin market, with Scott Minerd, the chief investment officer of Guggenheim Partners, referring to crypto as "Tulipmania." Earlier, the Wall Street executive had called for a $600,000-price target for Bitcoin.

But the mind-boggling long liquidation event has not made everyone bearish. On the contrary, some analysts have highlighted the wipeout as a catalyst for the next big bullish setup in the Bitcoin market.

For instance, pseudonymous trader "Twitterati CL207" posted a long thread explaining why he thinks a drop in open interest has made Bitcoin stronger in the long run.

Money-makers 

CL207 highlighted the role of market makers in running a cryptocurrency derivative platform. The analyst explained how their strategies assisted in transferring Bitcoin from weaker hands to stronger hands during the Wednesday dip.

In retrospect, the Bitcoin futures market is typically excessively long. That prompts market makers to gain exposure on the other side of the bullish trades. So, they open short positions.

But that does not necessarily make the liquidity providers bearish. They prefer to back up their short positions by hedging in spot markets by purchasing BTC or other bullish derivative exposure (options, futures, perpetual swaps, etc.).

"Sometimes," said CL207, "there's hedge/short demand hitting the market maker too so that the market maker can sell their shorts back to them, but generally in crypto, its long-biased, and thus market maker holds [the] spot as collateral to their shorts."

The analyst added that market makers buy spot coins against high leverage demand from bulls, noting that leveraged long position holders are "the weakest possible hands" — most vulnerable to liquidations should the spot bitcoin rate turn lower.

When the long liquidation occurs, market makers close their shorts against them to provide liquidity. They also sell their spot positions to remain neutral.

The trader explains that what happened on Wednesday when roughly $5 billion worth of long positions were liquidated as Bitcoin price fell from nearly $40,000 to $30,000 within three hours. But then, the BTC/USD exchange quickly recovered back to $40,000.

At the same time, the Bitcoin futures open interest did not follow the spot price recovery.

Bitcoin price recovers while futures' open interest stay low. Source: TradingView.com

"This means we just had the most significant weak hands to strong hands transfer in probably since March 12, 2020," noted CL207, adding that strong hands with real cash bought the BTC on the cheap from market makers. He said:

"These coins have now transferred from short-term leverage speculators to real cash buyers."

Who are strong Bitcoin hands?

Meanwhile, Willy Woo wrote in his latest newsletter that long-term prospects in the Bitcoin market remain healthy, reiterating what fellow trader CL207 highlighted in his Twitter thread: That the coins are going into the pockets of long-term investors.

A long-term investor in the Bitcoin market, or "hodler," typically defines an entity that sees the cryptocurrency as a hedge against fiat currencies. Capital injection policies undertaken by western central banks to cushion the impact of coronavirus on their economies have raised fears of inflation.

For instance, the U.S. Federal Reserve announced last year that it wants to push inflation above 2%. The central bank has been maintaining a near-zero interest rate policy and has been buying $120 billion worth of government bonds and mortgage-backed securities every month.

"There is no need for Bitcoin to replace fiat currencies to maintain value completely," said Vincenzo Furcillo, risk analyst at Seeking Alpha. He added:

"Despite the possible volatility, the projections show a positive skew over the next five years. In small proportions, Bitcoin should find space as a strategic investment in the portfolio of investors looking to hedge to upcoming inflation."

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Bye alt season? Analysts see traders rotating back to Bitcoin after $30K ‘reset’

The short-term investment case for Bitcoin remains intact on the prospects of rotational trading from altcoin markets.

The Bitcoin (BTC) market bias stands divided on how to interpret the BTC price crash this week, wherein the pair lost more than 35% of its value at one point on Wednesday, crashing to as deep as $30,000 on Coinbase.

Global media outlets attributed the plunge to China reiterating its anti-crypto business stance and Tesla suddenly discontinuing Bitcoin payments for its electric vehicles.

Traders buy the dip, leading Bitcoin to bounce immediately after testing $30,000. Source: TradingView.

Nikolas Panigirtzoglou, managing director for global market strategy at JP Morgan, further noted an ongoing decline in the capital that flows into publicly-listed Bitcoin funds. He suspected a rotational investment setup, wherein institutional investors were winding up their positions in the Bitcoin futures market and reallocating the proceeds to build long positions in gold funds.

"It is not clear what is driving this shift," Panigirtzoglou added.

"Perhaps institutional investors are fleeing Bitcoin as they see its previous two-quarter uptrend ending and thus seek the stability of traditional gold away from the rapid downshifting of digital gold."

He nevertheless reminded that Bitcoin's momentum signals remain in positive territory. Thus, it is still too early to declare the end of the bull market.

Bitcoin dominance awaits rebound

Stack Funds' Head of Research Lennard Neo also presented a similar, near-term upside setup, citing a potential rotational setup, but from altcoins to Bitcoin.

Lennard cited the recent directional trends in the Bitcoin market and its strength against a vast pool of alternative digital assets, dubbed as the Bitcoin Dominance Index. He noted that the net crypto market cap surged by around 40%, as Bitcoin's dominance against altcoins declined from 73.5% to 40.5%.

Bitcoin dominance index (blue) vs. crypto market capitalization (red). Source: Stack Funds

That suggests that many investors remained entrench within the cryptocurrency markets, focusing mostly on transferring their Bitcoin gains to altcoins that seemed promising in the short term. Lennard added that Ether's 180 percent year-to-date surge late last month emerged from the same Bitcoin-to-altcoin setup.

But now, the capital would want to fly back into the Bitcoin market, the former Bloomberg analyst stated, adding:

"We believe the rotational playbook has reversed as dark clouds loom over the markets. We are expecting investors to cycle back into Bitcoin as uncertainties increases as the markets undergo another reset. Hence, a bounce in Bitcoin dominance should occur, further supporting Bitcoin’s price in the short-term."

"Pretty routine"

Veteran hedge fund manager and investor Ben Miller also came out in support of Bitcoin's bullish bias, calling its recent downside correction as a "routine pullback."

"If I liked something at higher prices, it is a safe bet I will like it even more at lower prices," said the former Legg Mason Capital Management CIO as he cited similar Bitcoin price dumps during the mammoth 2017 bull market.

But bearish woes continue to offset the bullish predictions, especially as Guggenheim’s CIO Scott Minerd, who called for a $600,000 price target for Bitcoin, did a complete backflip while referring the cryptocurrency with "Tulipmania."

Meanwhile, Mark Haefele, CIO of UBS Global Wealth Management, called Bitcoin an unreliable store-of-value asset over its high price volatility. Julius de Kempenaer, a senior technical analyst at Stockcharts.com, also noted that Bitcoin's recent price crash dampened its safe-haven outlook.

Bitcoin was trading above $40,000 at the time of this writing, up more than 30% from its sessional low of $30,000.

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics

Guggenheim CIO Scott Minerd backflips on crypto, calling it ‘Tulipmania’

More FUD from the man that said Bitcoin would be worth $600K one day.

In complete 180 on his stance just a few months ago, the global Chief Investment Officer of investment giant Guggenheim has reacted to the crypto market crash by referring to it as ‘Tulipmania’.

It seems like Elon Musk is not the only wealthy person to make a u-turn on their position towards Bitcoin and crypto assets. As late as February, Guggenheim’s CIO Scott Minerd was calling for a long term Bitcoin price of $600,000 based on Guggenheim’s “fundamental research”.

But with markets plunging Minerd alluded to a bubble with his comments earlier today that claimed that “supply has swamped demand”.

Tulipmania is a phrase derived from a period during the Dutch Golden Age when prices for some bulbs of the fashionable tulip reached extraordinarily high levels, and then dramatically collapsed.

Compound Finance founder Robert Leshner argued that Minerd's tweet was inaccurate:

“Scott is dead wrong, bordering on financial malpractice. The supply of cryptocurrencies (#Bitcoin) and crypto assets ($ETH, $COMP, etc) does not increase as a function of price. That's like saying the supply of stocks increases, as demand does.”

Other industry experts also chimed in with crypto YouTuber Lark Davis replying with “wasn't your company going to invest hundreds of millions into Bitcoin? This comment shows you guys must have done almost no research on the topic, shocking.”

Others speculated that the investment company was trying to push prices down so that they could buy more.

It is not the first time Minerd has flip-flopped with his stance on crypto assets. In January he said that BTC would dump to $20,000 adding that it would go no higher than its price at the time which had just topped $40,000.

The FUD followed Guggenheim's proposed SEC filing to buy $500 million in BTC with critics arguing it may have been an effort to keep markets low to facilitate cheaper purchases. These bearish statements also came after a declaration in December in which he stated that the asset should be one day worth $400,000.

In April, Minerd was back with his predictions of doom and gloom calling for a return to $20,000 after Bitcoin had already blasted past $50,000. In the weeks that followed the asset went on to reach an all-time high of $65,000 before the inevitable correction began.

The pullback as it stands is currently at 43.5% with BTC hitting an intraday low of $36,700 in late trading on Wednesday, May 19.

From Code to $100K: Why Bitcoin’s Milestone Matters to Economics