Landing the Big Fish

When searching for opportunities in the markets, traders always day-dream about landing that one trade that just takes off and never looks back, landing them a massive, wind-fall profit. Well, one such trade which would have delivered this dream profit would have been to buy Bitcoin at the start of this year. As king of the cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin is attracting more and more attention and consequently continues to grow in value.

Introducing Bitcoin: Cashing In On Cryptocurrencies

In fact, this year alone, Bitcoin is up over 600%! A simple trade, right? Wrong! You see, although it has seen gargantuan gains, it has also suffered terrible losses at times over the year; the type of losses that would be extremely difficult for the typical trader to stomach. The problem with Bitcoin is that, although it clearly surging in value, plumbing fresh record highs once again this month, it remains an extremely volatile instrument which like a bull at a rodeo, is constantly trying to shake its ride off.

The Bitcoin Rollercoaster

The chart above shows Bitcoin over the last 12 months. It is clear to see that if you had bought at the start of the period you would be up handsomely. Indeed, if you bought over the last month, you would be extremely happy with your returns also. However, note how many violent downswings there are. If, for example, you bought at the start of September when Bitcoin was trading $4,950, do you think you would still be holding two weeks later when Bitcoin was trading over $1500 lower at $3226? Indeed, even right back at the start of the year, if you bought Bitcoin on day one of 2017, within 10 days it was immediately down 20%.

Volatility Likely to Increase

As more and more investors load into the Bitcoin market space, from retail traders at home to major-league hedge funds, this type of volatility is likely to worsen. Similar price drops in almost every other market and instrument show us that when the market is crashing, it is exacerbated by a sharp increase in volume. Price is plummeting so more and more people start squaring their orders, sending price further lower, followed by further squaring of orders, until the market reaches equilibrium and price stabilizes.

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