Crypto Tidbits: Satoshi Isn’t Dumping His Bitcoin, China ‘Bans’ Cryptocurrency Mining

Another week, another round of Crypto Tidbits. Bitcoin has seen quite the tumultuous week.

After rallying towards $10,000 at the start of the week on the back of post-halving buying, seemingly caused by both retail and institutional players, Bitcoin plunged to $8,800 over the course of two days. Altcoins posted similar losses, with some underperforming the market leader and others outperforming BTC.

Chart (heat map) of the performance of top cryptocurrencies from Coin360. Current as of May 22nd.

The drop coincided with rumors that Satoshi Nakamoto — the founder of the flagship cryptocurrency — was dumping his coins on the open market after a transaction was sent from an address created one month after Bitcoin was launched. This rumor has since been disproven by blockchain data.

In spite of the drop, analysts are still fundamentally long-term bullish on Bitcoin.

As reported by NewsBTC previously, blockchain analytics company Glassnode noted on May 18th that the Puell Multiple — the USD value of BTC issued per day over the one-year moving average of the same metric — reached a crucial level.

Chart of Bitcoin’s Puell Multiple (on a macro scale) from crypto analytics firm Glassnode

As the below chart indicates, whenever the multiple entered the green zone, it found a macro bottom.

This strong precedent suggests that BTC is nearing a post-halving bottom and is about to embark on its fourth long-term rally.

Tuur Demeester — founder of Adamant Capital — echoed the optimism in an interview published this week by Messari, a crypto research firm:

“I think a price target of like $50,000 is not insane at all, especially given just how crazy the money printing is. I would even say between $50,000-$100,000.”

Related Reading: Crypto Tidbits: Bitcoin Halving, Reddit Using Ethereum, JP Morgan Dabbles in Crypto

Bitcoin & Crypto Tidbits

“China is not banning mining, it’s complicated as usual, messages frequently conflict especially at local or regional level. Actual message is basically ‘don’t use local government support for mining to illegally raise money’. Thank you,” Graham wrote, trying to dissuade the fears of a Chinese crackdown on crypto assets such as Bitcoin.

Featured Image from Shutterstock
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