What are crypto’s next catalysts?

It’s only the third week of 2024 and Bitcoin has already had a momentous year. What lies ahead? [Shubham’s Web3 via Unsplash]
There’s never a dull moment on the blockchain. Here’s what you need to know this week:
What’s next for crypto markets? With BTC ETFs approved, here’s what else could shape markets in 2024.
Learn to read two key “moving averages.” The basics behind trading indicators commonly used by the pros.
This week in numbers. The price of Solana’s new crypto-powered phone, Ethereum’s record transaction rate, and more stats to know.
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What’s next for crypto after the ETF approval?
When the first spot BTC ETFs in the U.S. began trading last Thursday — with eleven new funds from firms including BlackRock, Grayscale, and Franklin Templeton — it marked a new era for crypto.
By almost any standard, the new investment products had a blockbuster launch, with the ETFs seeing around $800 million of inflows and nearly $10 billion in trade volume over the first three days alone. (Coinbase is the custody partner for eight of the new funds.)
So far, the impact on bitcoin prices has been mixed. BTC spiked as high as $49,000 after the SEC greenlit the new ETFs, but then prices dipped by around 12% in the days following.
Now that we’ve turned the page on the BTC ETF approval saga — which dominated crypto news stories for much of 2023 — you might be wondering what’s next.
Here’s what you need to know.
All eyes turn toward BTC’s next “halving”
Bitcoin is designed to be an inflation-resistant asset — and one mechanism it uses to achieve this is the halving, in which the amount of BTC generated by mining is reduced by half every four years until all 21 million BTC have been mined. (This is anticipated to be sometime around the year 2140.)
The next halving, which is expected to happen in April, has crypto watchers paying close attention. Historically, much of bitcoin’s gains have come in the 12 to 18 months after the halving — at times when the newly limited supply has faced surging demand. At the time of 2020’s halving, for instance, one BTC cost less than $10,000. By the peak in 2022, prices had climbed to more than $67,000.
But similar to what may have happened with the approval of BTC ETFs, some investors believe the impact of the halving has already been “priced in,” while others think that the impact could be indirect. As Coinbase Institutional noted in its 2024 outlook, the halving’s main significance could be its ability “to raise media attention around what makes bitcoin unique.”
ETH could be poised for a breakout year
Last week’s bitcoin ETF news proved to be a boon for Ethereum, which briefly spiked above $2,700 — reaching its highest price since May 2022.
And there are reasons to be even more optimistic about ETH