Bitcoin's (BTC) price has risen by 120% this year and most analysts foresee further gains in the near term. They point to expectations the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) will approve one or more spot exchange-traded crypto funds (ETFs) soon and the halving of the Bitcoin blockchain's mining reward, which is due April next year.
The bullish case is also gaining support from the wider economy. The charts below show a positive turnaround in the macroeconomic factors that played a role in last year's price crash.
Global central bank policy cycle
The chart by TS Lombard shows the balance of central banks tightening versus those loosening since 1947. Positive values suggest a net bias for tighter monetary conditions, while negative values indicate a preference for easing.
A loose policy involves boosting liquidity, that is
releasing more money into the financial system, through
interest-rate cuts and other measures and spurs
risk-taking, as observed in 18 months following the
coronavirus crash of March 2020. A tighter monetary policy
involves sucking liquidity out with interest-rate
increases and other tools to tame inflation. It often
disincentivizes risk-taking in financial markets, as seen
last year.
The plot has recently turned lower, indicating that last
year's global tightening cycle that rocked financial
markets, including cryptocurrencies, has peaked, and there
is now an increasing bias toward liquidity easing. With
inflation rates slowing worldwide, central banks have room
to take their feet off the tightening pedal. The move away
from tightening could lead to an increased inflow of money
into the crypto market. Bitcoin is known to be extremely
sensitive to changes in global liquidity conditions and
tends to rally when there's more money around.
U.S. financial conditions ease
The chart below shows investment banking giant Goldman
Sachs' U.S. Financial Conditions Index (FCI) since
January.
The index has tanked from the year's high of 100.74, seen
only a few weeks ago, to just under 100, undoing all the
tightening witnessed in September and October.
The decline stands opposite the Federal Reserve's
higher-for-longer interest-rate stance and hints at a
resilient U.S. economy ahead, a positive development for
risk assets, including cryptocurrencies. Most of bitcoin's
year-to-date gains have occurred during the U.S. trading
hours.
The FCI is a weighted average of short-term interest
rates, long-term interest rates, the trade-weighted U.S.
dollar exchange rate, an index of credit spreads, and the
ratio of equity prices to the 10-year average of earnings
per share.
A 1% fall (rise) in the index is known to bring about a 1%
positive (negative) GDP impulse in the subsequent three to
four quarters.
According to Fed analysts, financial conditions are a
“constellation of asset prices and interest rates” that
change based on economic health and monetary policy, and
which can also potentially affect the economy itself.