updraftplus domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131hustle domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131wpforms-lite domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131The price of Shiba Inu (SHIB) has been plummeting for the past five months, and crypto experts say it could fall even further.
It is currently in the same narrow range it experienced in late January and February this year.
At the moment, its biggest problems are a reduction in the number of transactions, a drop in the holder’s account, and a pullback in the price of the token.
The cryptocurrency’s plummeting performance so far this year has discouraged many investors. However, its vulnerable point is the lack of utility to grow the project
Although Shiba Inu joined Robinhood in April, that was only enough to raise its price nor its trading activity, as it had already been dragging a first quarter of the year with a 70% drop in its transactions recorded in the cryptocurrency.
In March alone, SHIB transactions fell from 329,893 to 216,260 and this had a negative impact on its trading value, which has lost nearly 75% since its all-time high last October.
A report released by Robinhood last month notes that the trading activity among millennials that helped fuel the cryptocurrency boom is drying up.
Moreover, the analysis also reflects that cryptocurrency revenues declined 39%.
Now, one of the main tactics used by cryptocurrency manufacturers to trigger their price is to cause inflation.
In this sense, Shiba Inu is also willing to create shortages and although currently, there are 589,736,561,989,744 SHIB tokens in circulation, various analysts point out that the company could resort to its circulation strategy in an attempt to strengthen its value.
Another point to take into account is that SHIB contemplates the possibility of memecoins entering the metaverse space, as this would also strengthen cryptocurrencies.
The key breakout range for those envisioning an increase in the price of Shiba Inu is a daily close at or above $0.000026.
Dogecoin started out as a joke. Now it’s a top 10 digital currency worth $40 billion.
The cryptocurrency is based on the “Doge” meme, which rose to popularity in late 2013. The meme portrays a Shiba Inu dog alongside nonsensical phrases in multicolored, Comic Sans-font text.
Created in 2013 by software engineers Billy Markus and Jackson Palmer, dogecoin was intended to be used as a faster but “fun” alternative to bitcoin. It has since found a growing community online.
And now, defying all odds, dogecoin has a total market value of more than $40 billion, according to crypto market data site CoinGecko, adding over $20 billion in the last 24 hours. The digital token reached an all-time high of 32 cents Friday morning, more than doubling in price from a day ago.
It’s not the first time dogecoin has seen a wild climb. Like many cryptocurrencies, it has a tendency for volatile swings in price. In 2018, dogecoin’s price began rising in tandem with other popular digital currencies. It’s been fairly off the radar since then. But earlier this year, dogecoin skyrocketed on the back of enthusiasm from a Reddit group called SatoshiStreetBets.
Similar to the subreddit WallStreetBets, which helped fuel a rally in GameStop shares at the start of 2021, SatoshiStreetBets aims to pump up the prices of cryptocurrencies.
Dogecoin has been climbing again in the past week, hitting 10 cents a coin for the first time on Wednesday. It’s risen by a whopping 400% in the last seven days.
On Friday, a Reddit user posted a picture of their dogecoin holdings on the Robinhood investing app.
“Hey guys I just became a Dogecoin millionaire,” the user said, showing a balance of $1,081,441.29 in their account.
For one, there’s the Coinbase listing. The most popular U.S. virtual currency exchange went public on Wednesday, briefly hitting a $100 billion market cap in a landmark moment for cryptocurrencies.
The excitement around Coinbase’s debut led to a surge in the prices of bitcoin and ether. Bitcoin hit a record high of more than $64,000 on Thursday, while ether briefly topped $2,500 for the first time Friday morning. Dogecoin has been no exception to the frenzied interest in these digital assets.
Dogecoin has attracted a following among users of Robinhood. On Thursday, the U.S. online brokerage said there was a “major outage” in its crypto trading feature after facing “unprecedented demand.” The feature is now back online, Robinhood said.
Some reports have attributed the latest dogecoin rally to support for the meme-based token from Tesla CEO Elon Musk. He has made several tweets about dogecoin, which in turn has helped push up its price.
On Thursday, Musk posted a cryptic tweet saying “Doge Barking at the Moon,” likely in reference to the popular crypto slang phrase “to the moon.”
The billionaire has called dogecoin his “fav” cryptocurrency and “the people’s crypto.” Musk has also come out as a supporter of bitcoin, with his electric car company buying $1.5 billion worth of the cryptocurrency earlier this year.
But his tweets have worried some investors, given their apparent ability to move markets. Some bitcoin investors, for instance, have sounded the alarm about Musk’s dogecoin tweets. Nic Carter, co-founder of Castle Island Ventures, warned retail investors “are going to lose money on dogecoin,” calling it a “vehicle for speculation.”
Dogecoin’s skyrocketing price has led to worries of a potential bubble in the cryptocurrency market. Some investors already view bitcoin as a speculative bubble — the world’s most popular digital coin has more than doubled since the start of 2021.
“Dogecoin’s rise is a classic example of greater fool theory at play,” David Kimberley, an analyst at U.K. investing app Freetrade, told CNBC.
“People are buying the cryptocurrency, not because they think it has any meaningful value, but because they hope others will pile in, push the price up, and then they can sell off and make a quick buck.”
But, Kimberley added, “when everyone is doing this, the bubble eventually has to burst and you’re going to be left shortchanged if you don’t get out in time. And it’s almost impossible to say when that’s going to happen.”
“This is doubly the case in the crypto markets where a small group of players often hold a huge chunk of the total number of ‘coins’ in circulation. That means it only takes one person to dump all their holdings for the entire market to tank.”
The cryptocurrency dogecoin’s value has surged over the past few months thanks to the alignment of several important factors, including extra capital from stimulus checks, the popularity of free-trading apps like Robinhood and the backing of billionaire SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
But one reason has been understated in media reports, Billy Markus, the software engineer who co-created the coin, tells CNBC Make It: the community that’s formed around it over the past few years.
Markus created dogecoin, based on the Doge shiba inu meme, in “about two hours” in 2013 as a parody of the better-known cryptocurrency bitcoin; the “absurdity of Dog Money,” as he puts it, is by design. But investors aren’t in it strictly for the memes, he says.
“The crypto community can be pretty elitist and not very inclusive, and we wanted to make a community that was more fun, lighthearted and inclusive,” Markus writes in an email. “It worked, and is why the dogecoin community consistently maintains a presence.”
As its creator, Markus has an inherent interest in the coin’s success (though he claims to only own what people have recently given him). But he says that the community typically follows its Do Only Good Everyday motto, as evidenced by members’ responses to the American Cancer Society now accepting dogecoin donations.
Markus, who tweets under the handle Shibetoshi Nakamoto in a nod to pseudonymous bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto, often encourages his followers to donate their dogecoin to worthwhile causes while warning them against potential scams in the space.
In a Reddit post, he says that donating to charity isn’t the only way to do good, however. “Anything that is amusing or fun has value as well,” he writes.
Dogecoin has given investors something to rally behind over the past few difficult months when there was little else to look forward to, Markus says. “People have been suffering, stuck in their homes and struggling, seeing their dollar not go as far as it has previously.”
While no one can be certain of dogecoin’s long-term prospects, Mike Bucella, general partner at crypto-investment firm BlockTower Capital, says it has done a great deal to bring attention to crypto investing more generally. It’s lowered the barrier to entry for average investors to a, at times, confounding space.
“Very few things have done as much to bring eyeballs and people into crypto,” Bucella says. “That’s a crazy thing to say, but dogecoin specifically has brought in the retail masses.”
But to be clear: Like other cryptocurrencies, dogecoin is extremely volatile, and many have warned that it is a bubble waiting to burst. While the coin is up more than 10,000% in 2021 overall, it’s fallen around 30% from its recent high.
Investors should not invest any money in it that they cannot afford to lose entirely, and should be doubly cautious of dogecoin because there is not a finite number of the coin that can exist (each year a fixed issuance of 5.2 billion additional coins can be released, according to Markus). That makes the real value hard to judge, says Bucella.
This differs from bitcoin, which has a limited supply of 21 million, creating a “built-in scarcity,” James Ledbetter, editor of fintech newsletter FIN and CNBC contributor, told CNBC Make It.
But with a market capitalization over $56 billion as of Wednesday, dogecoin has also transcended being a mere joke.
“It’s definitely absurd,” says Markus. “But there’s something pure about it too.”
Sign up now: Get smarter about your money and career with our weekly newsletter
Don’t miss: Dogecoin is up more than 900% in the past month. Here’s why one crypto exec says he still isn’t buying