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The hype train has slowed down
During the last cryptorally we saw a lot of “blockchaintourism” by corporations and other institutional players - they played around with blockchain for a few weeks and then dropped it. This fueled the hype train even more, as every attempt “to go crypto” was widely publicized, but didn’t really add anything to the industry. However, in 2020, the trend shifted. Nowadays, according to the Deloitte, companies aren’t interested in experiments with blockchain anymore and don’t see it as “free money”. They look for pragmatic solutions to business problems and make blockchain technology work for their specific needs.Besides, large investors also started to think of cryptocurrencies in a more practical way as the industry matured. “The type of investors in this bull run are very different. They’re super sophisticated institutional investors like legendary Paul Tudor Jones, [Stanley] Druckenmiller. This is the most sophisticated investors, the smartest people in the room, buying the bitcoin quietly. It’s not a FOMO thing, so it’s very different from 2017. This cast of characters, these companies, these investors were not in bitcoin back then”, - said Tyler Winklevoss, early bitcoin investor, co-Founder of Winklevoss Capital.His opinion is supported by other experts in crypto and finance. "I am positive this is not November 2017. Listen, the market got way, way overbought. It was overbought by every statistic, every metric you can look", - said Galaxy Digital'sCEO Mike Novogratz. According to him, today the main driver for growth is adoption. "Insurance companies, asset managers, big institutions haven't bought bitcoin yet and they want to", - added Novogratz.Does it mean that the hype around blockchain, Bitcoin and crypto is over and it is all about practicality and rationality now? No, not at all. Any asset that shows rapid growth inevitably generates a lot of interest from small investors than in November and almost twice as high than in the beginning of the year. Interestingly, there is no major shift in shares of major exchanges in this traffic. Some relatively new players are gaining momentum, but traffic to the “whales” grows almost equally.And it has already started to cause issues: some crypto exchanges suffer from outages due to overload. It reminds us of the latter stage of the 2017 crypto rally, when major trading platforms also couldn’t keep up with the demand.People seek info
Another sign of crypto audience calming down is a shift is search queries: instead of just searching basic information on cryptocurrencies people started to look for statistics, charts and actual data. Queries like “Bitcoin price chart” and “Bitcoin price analysis” are becoming more and more common. Huge financial brokers, such as , note a significant increase in such requests. The audience not only looks for ways to earn on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, but also wants to know for sure whether these ways actually work.Technical analysis and cryptocurrency price action started to slowly replace “gurus” that relied only on their status as a proof of their predictions. The audience finally realized that Bitcoin (or any other cryptocurrency) is just another asset, just like stocks or fiat currencies. And it can be traded as that easily, just in one click, as we can see on the .