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Its been said that the stock market is like astrology for dudes in finance.
If thats the case, then mapping politics to markets must be akin to crystal healing, or animal magnetism.
Lets not let that get in the way of a good time.
Republican nominee and former President Donald Trump is scheduled to appear later this week on stage in Nashville at Bitcoin 2024.
It‘s set to be a landmark event for Bitcoin and the broader crypto space. It’s not the first known instance of a former US president participating in an industry event — President Bill Clinton took that honor alongside former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair at Sam Bankman-Frieds Crypto Bahamas Conference in April 2022.
Terra would implode a few weeks later and FTX collapsed six months after that, mostly under the weight of Bankman-Frieds fraud. He was later sentenced to 25 years in prison, almost 700 days after the Bahamas event.
Fingers crossed Trumps appearance at Bitcoin 2024 bodes better for crypto.
And there are plenty of folk who believe that it will. Same with Trumps positivity towards Silicon Valley — the general consensus being that the tech-heavy stock market will have more room to run under a second Trump administration.
And while the Nasdaq has decoupled from bitcoin over the past three weeks, whats good for tech stocks is still considered pretty good for crypto.
Now‘s time for the crypto’s political palm reading. Five different administrations have directed American politics over the last 30 years, two Republican (Bush and Trump) and three Democrat (Clinton, Obama and Biden).
Red for Republican, blue for democrat, AAPL for scale (chart is in “log” view)
Markets under Bush struggled. He came in just as the dot-com bubble burst at the turn of the millennium and quickly pulled the US into wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, which together lasted two decades.
The S&P 500 dipped more than 20% in the four months following Obamas win in November 2008. But since then — a period that includes both Trump and Biden presidencies — stocks have mostly trended upwards, sans a few hiccups (like the Covid crash) and an eight-month stretch in 2022, when the S&P also retraced by over 20%.
Satoshi Nakamoto mined the first Bitcoin block less than three weeks before Obama first took office. Bitcoin, the currency, exploded by nearly 80 million percent across his two terms, alongside the launch of thousands of cryptocurrencies, including ether.
Were Obama and the Democratic Party at all responsible for all that crypto-wealth generation? Are you feeling particularly moody today because the full moon is in Capricorn this time of year? Whos to say.
For what it‘s worth, it’s really under Trump that “crypto” flourished into the mainstream. Bitcoins $20,000 all-time high, the Ethereum ICO boom and DeFi Summer all happened with Trump in the White House.
The orange dotted lines are Bitcoin halvings — which happen half a year before each US election
Crypto‘s total market cap went from $1 trillion to as much as $3 trillion in Biden’s first year. But the second was marred by a series of debacles for crypto, the biggest shown on the dotted lines on the chart above.
And even despite bitcoin‘s surge to new all-time highs, the rest of the crypto market still hasn’t returned to its 2021 peak.
Bulls would say a second Trump term could make all the difference. But with Mercury going into retrograde a few weeks after the election in November, anything could happen.
Data Center
Times are a-changin
How the turn tables.
That‘s one way to think about former President Donald Trump’s shift in stance when it comes to crypto.
Last election, Trump was staunchly anti-crypto. He even tweeted (back when journalists, myself included, reported on his posts) that he was not a “fan” of bitcoin and crypto.
“Unregulated Crypto Assets can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and other illegal activity,” he said at the time. Looking back on it now, it almost seems like something Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, would say given her staunchly anti-crypto stance.
Trump even went after the now-defunct Libra stablecoin project from Facebook (before it was Meta), claiming that it would need a banking charter.
Now one has to wonder how hed approach such a project, given his support for the crypto industry this election.
I feel the need to note that we haven‘t seen Trump float any actual policies for crypto. Similarly, though, we have yet to see or hear anything on the industry from Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign. Her camp did turn down an offer to appear at Bitcoin 2024, unlike both Trump and Robert Kennedy Jr.
Trump, however, has already made strides not only by hosting events and making appearances with folks in crypto, but also by becoming the first major party nominee to accept crypto donations to his campaign earlier this year.
And, in a way, when you look back on the price of bitcoin throughout the years, there‘s a far-fetched argument that Trump’s always been good for it — even when he was staunchly anti-crypto.
Take a look at 2016, for example. After Trump‘s victory, bitcoin was boosted to over $730. In fact, it was one of the few sectors to actually benefit from the 2016 election victory. The futures for the major indices on Wall Street all sold off pretty abruptly. And so started bitcoin’s journey as a safe-haven asset… but I digress, lets go back to Trump.
In 2021, Trump continued his vocal anti-crypto approach. He said that bitcoin “just seems like a scam.” He added later that year that crypto investing was “potentially a disaster waiting to happen.”
Given what was just around the corner, with the depegging of Terra‘s algorithmic stablecoin and the shitshow that was FTX, he may not have been totally wrong on that one, if we’re being fair. But alas, no one had a crystal ball to really see what was lying in wait for the industry.
I think I‘ve made my point: There’s a very detailed history of Trump favoring the US dollar over crypto. But somethings changed this cycle.
Oh how Id love to be a fly on the wall (and a time traveler to boot) to hear some of the conversations the Trump campaign had around crypto this year, given the narrative shift.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
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