TechScape: I’m no longer making predictions about cryptocurrency. Here’s why (2024)

I’ve been writing about cryptocurrency for my entire career. In that time, one point I’ve always stuck to is simple: don’t listen to me for investment advice. Today, I want to quantify why.

Bitcoin was created in 2009, while I was in my first year at university. As an economics student – and massive nerd – it sat squarely at the intersection of my interests. By my final year of uni in 2011, the original cryptocurrency was experiencing its first boom and bust cycle. It rose from a low of $0.30 to a high of $32.34 that summer, before crashing back down to less than $3 when Mt. Gox, the original bitcoin exchange, was hacked. (This will become a theme.)

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That was also the year the Guardian first covered the currency, with Ruth Whippman warning: “Its critics in the political sphere fear that it could give rise to an online Wild West of gambling, prostitution and global bazaars for contraband.”

I was very much on the outside looking in, though. Not being a regular drug user (cf “massive nerd”), the mainstream use of bitcoin – getting pills or weed delivered by post from the Silk Road – passed me by, so I found it more of an intellectual curiosity than anything else.

This is perhaps in part because the first thing I remember hearing about bitcoin was a tale, probably apocryphal, of someone using their gaming PC to mine the currency in their dorm room in a heatwave. The air conditioning failed, the user reported in a forum post, and heatstroke left them with mild brain damage. You can see why I was unimpressed.

By the second major boom, I was covering economics for the New Statesman. And that’s where the trouble starts.

In my first published piece using the word “bitcoin” – the first time the New Statesman had covered the topic – I confidently declared: “This is what a bubble looks like.” At the time, bitcoin was trading at around $40 a coin.

It has never gotten that low again.

I was right that there was a bubble in the offing: the price of bitcoin had doubled in two months, and would double twice more before it popped less than a month later. But the crash, which would have been huge for any other normal asset, was a reduction of around half, taking bitcoin to the lows of … three weeks prior.

A decade on, the memory of this bold claim still haunts me, and I refuse to make predictions about the future of any cryptocurrency. In fact, I’ve taken to joking that the best way to make money, historically, is to do the opposite of what I say.

So I put it to the test.

The Alex Hern bitcoin investment strategy

Obviously, I don’t give actual investment advice. So I reviewed every article I’ve ever written that mentions “bitcoin”, and sorted them based on whether or not a reader would think they were good news for the crypto, or bad news. There’s an element of value judgment to this, of course: you might disagree with my decision that a story about the Winklevii launching a bitcoin price tracker in 2014 is broadly positive; or that a story about Mt. Gox reopening after a hack (another hack) is broadly negative. My hope is that the disagreements average out.

Then, I paired the stories against the price of bitcoin on the day they were written, and asked a simple question: if you’d bought $10 of bitcoin every time I wrote something that seemed like bad news, and sold $10 of bitcoin every time I wrote something that seemed like good news, how would your investment have performed?

The bottom line: you would have spent a net of $420 on bitcoin, and have a crypto wallet containing around 1.1 bitcoin as a result – worth, at today’s market value, a little over $22,000.

Oof.

Going over the specifics, though, gives me a bit of cheer. Well over half that gain comes from a total of just seven pieces written in 2013: six negative and one positive. At the end of that run, you’d have spent $50, and own 0.7 bitcoin. Those articles have an outsized influence on the over-calculation, due to how much bitcoin’s value has increased in the nine years since they were published.

Bitcoin had two boom and bust cycles in 2013. The first, in April, took it to a high of $266. The second, in December was bigger – much bigger. The price of a coin spiked at $1,238, and fell to a low of $687. The rush of pieces I wrote about the currency when I started at the Guardian, through late 2013 and the first half of 2014, contribute much less to the bottom line, even though there were more of them.

It was also the period with the most positive stories for bitcoin. In 2014, the potential of the currency was still untapped: the idea that bitcoin or the blockchain might prove revolutionary wasn’t a hackneyed promise, but something that might be just around the corner. In that boom, I wrote as many positive stories as negative.

For every article about bitcoin hitting an “all-time high” of $269, there was another about a £1m hack of a payment processor. For every long feature asking if bitcoin was about to change the world, there was a warning from a Dutch central banker that the hype was “worse than tulip mania” (and he should know).

The timing of the pieces didn’t quite balance out, though, and by the end of that boom you would have turned your 0.7 bitcoin into 0.9 while cashing out as many dollars as you put in. And in that period, those bitcoin would have gone from $100 to more than $500.

From 2014 to the most recent boom, however, the money you put in would start being drowned out by the bitcoin you already own. $10 at the beginning of 2014 bought you around 0.01 bitcoin, and so 10 negative pieces from me would have sizeably increased your position.

Three years later, it would take 30 negative pieces for you to acquire the same amount of bitcoin. That meant the impact of the ICO boom – the first of the great expansions of the sector from a handful of cryptocurrencies to a whole ecosystem of sh*tcoins – was muted compared to what came before, despite stories about Iceland becoming a miner’s paradise and Kodak bringing out a branded cryptominer, leading to a flurry of buying and selling.

And three years after that, at the beginning of 2020, a $10 investment in the cryptocurrency would get you just 0.001 BTC. That’s good news for our theoretical investor, because 2020 marked my most positive reporting on the currency. Stories such as the US government seizing bitcoins used in the Silk Road were a sign of the growing professionalism of the sector and, for the first time, bitcoin was enough of a fixture of the tech scene that even in a comparative slump the Guardian was still covering it.

On to the latest boom and bust cycle, where – finally – the investor starts to lose out and I claw back some of my reputation. From its peak at $69,000 earlier this year, bitcoin has fallen by a third. I’ve diligently covered the collapse, which has been by far the most brutal the sector has faced. That means the tracker has sunk almost $200 into bitcoin, and even as the overall value of the holdings has plummeted from a high of $50,000 in March to its present number.

What next?

The question going forward, of course, is whether the pattern holds up. Will you continue to make money if you buy when I’m grumpy about crypto, and sell when I’m optimistic? Obviously – see above – I’m not about to make any strong predictions, but I doubt we’ll ever again see as sharp an increase in price as we saw in the last decade, which means I’ll never make a call that plays out as badly as the ones in those initial pieces from 2013.

Which is not to say I can’t make other terrible calls. Remember Dejitaru Tsuka, the sh*tcoin that was sold with my name? I broke my rules, and warned readers: “I do not think you should buy this sh*tcoin, nor any others.” Well, if you’d bought £10 worth of Tsuka when I said that, you’d now have … £4,000.

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TechScape: I’m no longer making predictions about cryptocurrency. Here’s why (2024)

FAQs

Which coin will reach $1 in 2024? ›

The road to $1 will be filled with mathematical hurdles

Simple math dictates that at $1 per token, Shiba Inu would have a market cap of $589.29 trillion. In other words, it would be worth 196 times more than Microsoft, the most valuable company in the world.

How much will $1 bitcoin be worth in 2025? ›

Bitcoin Overview
YearMinimum PriceMaximum Price
2025$115,285.47$133,872.61
2026$165,756.42$200,472.95
2027$240,935.90$288,284.17
2028$359,657.03$422,196.78
8 more rows

Which crypto will explode in 2024? ›

Cryptocurrency Analyst

This article will introduce five top cryptocurrencies that are tipped to explode in 2024: Pikamoon, Solana, The Graph, Sei, and Cosmos. Diving deeper, we'll explore the factors that may contribute to their explosive growth, analyse market trends and insights, and examine investment strategies.

How low will bitcoin go in 2024? ›

Bitcoin, it found, is likely to hit an average peak price of $87,875 in 2024, with some experts predicting it will climb as high as $200,000. On the flip side, the average lowest price Bitcoin could hit by the end of 2024, is seen as $35,734, the report said, with some predicting it will fall as low as $20,000.

How much will usd coin be worth in 2030? ›

USDC (USDC) Price Prediction 2030
YearPrice
2025$ 1.050049
2026$ 1.102551
2027$ 1.157679
2030$ 1.340158
1 more row

Which coins will explode in future? ›

These 5 DeFi platforms are primed to explode in 2024
  • BNB. 48,468 (1.71%) Buy.
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  • Bitcoin. 53,94,700 (-0.45%) Buy.
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Mar 5, 2024

Will Bitcoin be worth anything in 10 years? ›

In its 2023 Big Ideas report, Ark Invest laid out several price targets for Bitcoin. The report sees Bitcoin hitting price targets in 2030 of $257,500 in the bearish forecast, $682,000 in an average market and $1.48 million in a bullish market.

What will Bitcoin be worth in 2050? ›

If we draw a line connecting Bitcoin's historical lows, we get a prediction of $1.3 million by 2030 and a staggering $200+ million by 2040 and 2050, which would put its market cap at an unreasonable $4 quadrillion. By this time, this asset class will likely be matured.

How much will 1 Bitcoin be worth in 5 years? ›

We predict that Bitcoin will hold an average price of $60,000 in 2024, thanks to the Halving event, and settle more in 2025 with an average of $65,000. In 2026, we see Bitcoin trading as high as $90,000 by the end of the year. By 2030, we predict that Bitcoin could reach a high of $160,000.

What is the best crypto to buy right now? ›

The top cryptocurrencies by market cap are bitcoin and ethereum, which have long been entrenched as the No. 1 and No. 2 cryptocurrencies. After that, a collection of cryptocurrencies jostle for position, although the third biggest is stablecoin tether (USDT).

What is the best small crypto to buy? ›

The Top 13 Cheapest Cryptos to Buy in 2024
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What is the best coin to invest in? ›

Best Crypto To Buy Now
  1. Bitcoin (BTC) Market cap: $1.4 trillion. ...
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  3. Tether (USDT) Market cap: $107.1 billion. ...
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  5. Solana (SOL) Market cap: $78.1 billion. ...
  6. XRP (XRP) Market cap: $34.7 billion. ...
  7. U.S. Dollar Coin (USDC) ...
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Apr 9, 2024

What will $100 dollars of Bitcoin be worth in 10 years? ›

A $100 investment in Bitcoin could purchase 0.00607 BTC today based on a price of $16,466.14 at the time of writing. If Bitcoin hits the $1 million price target by Wood in 2030, the $100 investment would turn into $6,070. This represents a gain of 5,970% from now until 2030.

Will Bitcoin skyrocket in 2024? ›

Early demand for spot bitcoin ETFs suggests significant institutional interest in crypto that could propel bitcoin prices to new highs in the first half of 2024.

How much Bitcoin will be in 5 years? ›

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Prediction 2030
YearPrice
2024$ 66,138.06
2025$ 69,444.97
2026$ 72,917.22
2027$ 76,563.08
1 more row

Which coin will give highest return in 2025? ›

Top 10 Cryptos to Hold Become a Millionaire in 2025💥
  • Bitcoin: Bitcoin needs no introduction as the pioneer of cryptocurrencies and the flagship digital asset. ...
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  • Chainlink:
Mar 23, 2024

Which coin will grow by 2025? ›

Next Cryptocurrency to Explode in 2025: Top Picks for Massive...
  • Ethereum (ETH-USD): Ethereum, often dubbed the "king of smart contracts," is poised for significant growth. ...
  • XRP (XRP-USD): ...
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  • Toncoin (TON-USD): ...
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  • Cronos (CRO):
Apr 7, 2024

Which coin will boom in 2025? ›

7 Cryptos With Explosive 5X Potential by 2025
  • Ethereum (ETH-USD): Even with its relatively high price ETH has 5x upside.
  • XRP (XRP-USD): XRP is free legally and remains the top cross-border transaction token.
  • Cardano (ADA-USD): Strong fundamentals and low price are the prime factors for Cardano.
Mar 7, 2024

Which coins will rise in 2025? ›

Smog Token (SMOG)
  • Ethereum. 2,69,314 (0.52%) Buy.
  • BNB. 50,370 (0.06%) Buy.
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  • Bitcoin. 55,54,530 (-0.39%) Buy.
Feb 15, 2024

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