With the U.S. presidential election next week, markets continue to price in a Trump victory, not just in the U.S. either. Wisesoft, a Chinese software company that builds air control programs, has doubled its share prices in the last month due to the association of its Chinese name with the victory of Trump.
Speaking of a Trump victory, this week there were a slew of stories predicting that even if Trump were to win, Bitcoin would go down – a so-called "Trump dump." First up is Peter Schiff, who I described in this week's episode of Token Narratives as a lamprey feeding off of Bitcoin. Ever the Bitcoin permabear, Schiff believes that since Bitcoin's performance hasn't shared the upward momentum of other Trump-related assets, it indicates that even if he wins Bitcoin won't benefit. Thegiver, a great follow on X, laid out his Bitcoin-Trump thesis in this thread, which basically says that recent BTC inflows represent election hedging, not sticky capital. As soon as the election is over, the money will vacate, tanking the price. Also, the kind of liquidity injections necessary to cause a significant price rise are not coming any time soon, let alone in the last quarter of this year.
Finally, there's the idea that if Trump wins and institutes tariff's resembling his rhetoric, it will cause goods inflation for the foreseeable future until the U.S. reshores the manufacturing capacity. This could cause the Fed to pause or reverse monetary easing, which would not be good for risk assets such as Bitcoin and crypto.
I personally think the likelihood of a Trump victory followed by a dump is unlikely. Dare I say, markets agree. Bitcoin made significant headlines this week as it approached its all-time high, breaching $73,500 on Tuesday, just shy of the previous record set in March 2024. This surge marked the first time Bitcoin breached the $73,000 level in over seven months, reflecting strong market momentum and investor interest, particularly in light of recent institutional investments and next week's election.
Michael Saylor's Microstrategy, which could be characterized as an institution-like Bitcoin investment vehicle, announced a $42 billion plan to accelerate bitcoin purchases, aiming to strengthen its reserves and position itself as a leader in digital asset investment. Crypto Twitter received this news well, of course, but there were critics.
While Bitcoin flirted and ultimately failed at breaking the all-time high, Ethereum did what it has done best this year – underperformed. Amidst the agony of Ethereum's lackluster showing, I thought Jon Charbonneau's thread on X making the case for Bitcoin's L2 ecosystem over Ethereum's, was really twisting the knife into Ethereum bag holders like myself.
Then I read Bankless' Ryan Adams' reply, which had me laughing in a macabre, bear-cycle kind of way. Let's hope Ryan's counter bet, that the ETH FUD is way overplayed, comes true!
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