In the short term, US-traded spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced nearly $1 billion in outflows between August 26 and September 6 during a Bitcoin sell-off, but most of these losses were recovered over the following two weeks, with $801 million in inflows from September 9 to September 20, according to Farside Investors. Notably, the largest inflows occurred on September 17, one day before the Federal Reserve's FOMC meeting, with $186.8 million directed into Bitcoin ETFs, likely influenced by the Fed's rate cut. In the long term, Bernstein predicts that as more brokers approve these products, ETF inflows will "reaccelerate."
Laine Ford : no chat to you no comment
BelleWeather : I think the BTC ‘cycle,’ if it ever existed, and was not due to a small network taking profits early on and then calamities due to large players committing fraud in more recent years, is broken. I expect a still tumultuous but steady incline as the network grows and the market matures, with corrections that reflect outside forces, as with any market. Not unlike the undulations in the prices of precious metals or stocks. I am definitely buy and hold on BTC. Though I do hope the crypto market beyond that lasts a bit longer. Without stimulus and a pandemic, I think fewer traders will get into altcoins. And I think bitcoin will steadily increase its share of that market (if not others.) I think the time scale on that will be slowly and then all at once. I hope there are enough participants to fuel a run on altcoins one last time, as I hold a small portfolio of them, but worry that it will be subdued as BTC dominates.
edmaxx76 :
Lets Gamble :
CornpopBadDude : oh
Kelly_Liu :
edward mcelhiney : If you were given some cash from your government and concluded about the future of that currency’s value what would you do?
Kelly_Liu :
BONEHEAD20 : BTC always have outperformed. Will continue to do so
Edony Princivil : BTC willl hit 70k soon
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