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Cryptocurrency prices (led by Bitcoin) were rising into the end of 2023 amid support from a series of news headlines that emerged in the latter half of the year. These included the following:

  • Repudiation of key crypto individuals and firms that were seen as bad actors—specifically the conviction of Sam Bankman-Fried of FTX for fraud1 and the admission of money laundering violations from founder and CEO of Binance, Changpeng Zhao.2
  • Rulings against the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in high-profile court cases from both Ripple and Grayscale. Judges disagreed with the SEC’s characterization of Ripple’s XRP token as a security3 and called the regulator’s rejection of Grayscale’s spot bitcoin ETF application “capricious and arbitrary.”4

Prospects for increased investor flows into Bitcoin come just as the asset is expected to see the pace at which new supply is created slow down. Bitcoin is expected to reach its next “halving” event sometime between March and May 2024. This refers to a cut in the size of the reward paid to bitcoin miners for verifying transactions on the payment network.  

Bitcoin is an algorithmically controlled asset where the release of new supply is pre-programmed into the code. Each time 210,000 blocks of transactions are added to the ledger, the size of the mining reward is cut in half. The bitcoin network has been through three prior halving events. In other cycles, the price of bitcoin has bottomed about 477 days prior to the halving, climbed in the period leading up to the event and then surged in the subsequent months.5 With bitcoin prices having hit a low of US$15,782 in November 2022 and then having rallied to over US$40,000 by early December 2023, this pattern seems to be repeating ahead of the fourth  halving event based on price activity to date.

Fundamental considerations and ecosystem metrics for the broader set of crypto coins and tokens also show a growth environment.

  • Ethereum, the largest layer-1 blockchain, has generated US$16.8 billion in fees with over 60.0% of this converting into revenue. This means that the Ethereum network surpassed US$10 billion revenue in just seven years, according to research from Caleb and Brown, putting the protocol on pace to match tech leaders Google (Alphabet) and Facebook (Meta) in reaching this revenue milestone in as fast a timeframe.6
  • A World Bank and Global Macro Investor study shows that crypto uptake is exceeding the pace of internet adoption. After seven years of development (beginning in 1992), the internet globally had reached 187 million users (+76% yearly growth) whereas crypto adoption (beginning with the launch of Ethereum in 2015) was 425 million (+137% yearly growth).7
  • Monthly active addresses in the crypto domain hit an all-time high of 15 million, doubling over the past two years as a growing variety of apps and services offered individuals new ways to engage. More than 700 new apps were created in 2022 alone.8
  • Almost 30,000 developers contributed to, or built on, crypto projects in 2023—an increase of +60% in the last 3 years despite crypto winter9 and significant price declines.10 

These factors collectively lead us to see continued strength and to expect renewed interest in crypto as an asset class in 2024 as the market sees a definitive end to crypto winter. 



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