Willy Woo’s Bitcoin Difficulty Ribbon Indicates Miner Capitulation, Which May Lead to Higher Prices
Willy Woo, a Bitcoin on-chain analytics expert, has just announced that he has been exploring a potential new price indicator. The analyst looks at simple moving averages referencing Bitcoin miner difficulty. He states that this allows for an easy to view breakdown of how the difficulty of mining Bitcoin changes over time.Introducing the Bitcoin Difficulty Ribbon. When the ribbon compresses, or flips negative, these are the best time to buy in and get exposure to Bitcoin. The ribbon consists of simple moving averages on mining difficulty so we can easily see the rate of change in difficulty. — Willy Woo (@woonomic)He argues that mining creates selling pressure. Those operating mining rigs must sell Bitcoin periodically to cover the costs of running the high powered computer units required to guess block hashes. He writes:
“This produces bearish price pressure.”
Woo states that the “weakest” miners are forced to sell more coins to remain in business. However, if difficulty continues to increase, they are forced into capitulation.
“The lack of miner selling pressure allows the price to stabilise and then climb; the classic accumulation bottom.”
Woo credits s being the first to spot the correlation between miner capitulation and the end of bear cycles in 2014. He states that he has built on the Civic (CVC) founder’s research with an additional five years of data.
He also notes that a similar miner capitulation can be seen during block reward halving, like that expected next May in Bitcoin. After the block reward is cut in half, weaker miners capitulate because they are no longer able to run profitability due to the fall in revenue they suffer. This leads to less Bitcoin being sold in the open market and a greater chance of upwards price action. Finally, Woo states that he finds more similarities between the current uptrend in Bitcoin and the 2012 bull market than he does with the beginnings of the 2017 price surge:“As a final note, notice how the 2019 the 2012 bull market have the same structure, we saw severe mining capitulation (ribbon flipped negative) leading to a shorter accumulation band before price breakout. This bull market has [sic.] resembles 2012 more than 2016 structurally.”
Related Reading: Bitcoin Miners Capitulated in Dec 2018 and it Could Signal the End of Bear Market
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