Plunging Crypto Communities Hint on the True State of the Market
Regardless of its great influence and benefits, the crypto market remains largely unstable. Bitcoin, once again, is a good example of how the entire industry follows the pattern of market capitulation resulting in industry bottoms each year as different circumstances create the weather for still a comparably smaller currency market. This is natural as, despite Bitcoin’s or altcoins’ massive market cap, they are still far behind sovereign currencies that are widely used across the globe.
Price is not the only issue: crypto communities are draining
Observing the price change is naturally a good indicator of how capitulation is occurring or if it is at all. However, the problem could be buried deeper in the global crypto community. One of the main issues and concerns that are often raised by observers of the industry is its isolation from the rest of the world. Not may average Joes understand the terms and rules of the sector as it remains largely complicated. Crypto community is what actually drives the industry as these people keep it on the front pages.
However, the latest data published by Aztek, a major crypto trader, suggests that there has been a major drop in the number of crypto-related groups and their members of Telegram.
Community Capitulation
— Aztek_Ƀtc (@Aztek_btc) April 15, 2020
(Whaleclub went private so it's the most accurate number for existing members after 2017 bull run)
Member loss is from June 2018 till April 2020 pic.twitter.com/Cy19Nz0PoS
Twitter users show concern that these communities were not real in the first place — the crypto world is full of bots and fake accounts. Others mention the poor attitude and support could be the reasons why people leave the communities — and that is one bad signal for the market.
But Telegram is not the only indicator of the decline of general interest in cryptos. One of the most popular cryptocurrency websites, Bitcointalk is experiencing a great downshift in users’ interest. There are even new topics started, named “Is Bitcointalk dying?”.
Also, the plunge of interest in cryptocurrencies is clearly depicted by search platforms. In December 2019 finance columnist for Yahoo, Edmund Heaphy, explained that “cryptocurrency searches crash 84% on Yahoo Search in 2019.” He disclosed that there were 65% less queries for the term “bitcoin” than in 2018. The same trend was confirmed by Google. The funny thing is that interest in Bitcoin halving is even more than the Bitcoin itself.
Image courtesy of Breitbart