Prediksi Harga Bitcoin 2023
I’m not
big on making price predictions. Too much uncertainty to be useful. Better to
think in probabilistic terms, reward to risk ratio and so on.
That being
said it is that time of the year where everyone is making their prediction for
what’s coming up in 2023. So why not. Why not give it a shot.
There is
no such thing as a correct methodology that will lead to accurate price
predictions. But at least let’s try to make our reasoning explicit.
So here is
the idea:
● Bitcoin is in a bear
market.
● We have had bear
markets in the past.
● We can look at the
historical returns during those periods and apply them to the current price.
●
That will give us a price range looking forwards.
With this
method we are making the assumption that past bear markets are a reasonable
guide for what’s happening right now. I’ll let you be the judge of that. But at
least our assumptions are clear.
So the
first thing we can do is take the past Bitcoin bear markets and look at the
distribution of returns during those periods.
We’ll do
the calculations on a 30 days basis so that the numbers are easier to
interpret.
And we’ll
break down the distribution in three groups:
● The distribution of
returns during the whole drawdown corresponding to a bear market.
● The distribution of
returns in the recovery phase of the bear markets, that is after the bottom as
been made.
●
The distribution of returns during the correction phase of the
bear markets, that is from the start of the drawdown until the bottom is made.
On the
chart below each day corresponding to a 30-day return of Bitcoin during one of
those periods. We are plotting the density of those days. The density is
colour-coded such that the closer you are to red the closer you are to the
average return of the distribution.
Check it
out.
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From top
to bottom we have:
● The bear markets
recovery phase.
● The bear markets
correction phase.
●
The bear markets as a whole.
The
distribution of returns in the recovery phase is characterized by the fact it
is clearly tilted towards positive returns. But as you can see that doesn’t
mean it is all up and to the right. This distribution overlaps the negative
side significantly. It is just more balanced than during the correction phase.
Because
the correction phase has two modes (the peaks). One mode around zero and
another one pretty deep in negative return territories. Moreover it has a fat
tail of large negative returns. And while there are good periods during the
correction phase (those famous bear market rallies) the distribution is pretty
thin on the side of positive returns.
Actually
maybe it makes sense to add one more thing to this chart. Here I’ve only
considered the past bear markets for Bitcoin. But how about we add the
distribution for the current bear market to see how it compares?
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First
thing to observe is that the average return and the mode on the negative side
for this bear market is very much in line with the previous bear markets.
The two
differences are that this bear market has not experienced too many left tail
events (so far). And it also doesn’t have any mode around zero. Maybe what’s
missing here is the bottoming process where we get one sharp drop giving us
some left tail event before things get better.
Based on
that what makes sense if we want to guesstimate Bitcoin’s price moving forward
is to consider two different scenarios:
● Scenario 1, Bitcoin has not found its bottom yet.
●
Scenario 2, Bitcoin has
already found its bottom and we are in the recovery phase.
For the
first scenario we want to use the full historical bear market distribution as
our basis to simulate Bitcoin’s price moving forward.
For the
second scenario we can use the historical distribution for the recovery phase
of the bear markets to simulate a recovery of Bitcoin.
Those
simulations essentially amount to sampling returns out of the respective
historical distributions and apply those to a starting price in order to
establish price trajectories.
Doing so
repeatedly gives a set of price trajectories. We can condense those price
trajectories into a distribution of simulated price on any given day.
That’s
basically what we have plotted below. For each end of the month looking one
year forward you can see the distribution of simulated prices.
The higher
the density the more time the simulation led to a given price. The red zone is
the highest likelihood zone. Moving away from that you get the whole range of
possibilities.
You read
those charts from top to bottom. At the top is November 2022. At the bottom is
November 2023. The left panel is obtained under the assumption that we have not
necessarily hit the bottom. The right panel is obtained under the assumption
the recovery phase has started.
Price is
read on the horizontal axis.
Take a
look.
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Obviously
the further in time you go the less certainty you get on the likely price
range.
But here
is what we can read from those two
scenarios.
Let's
start with the continuation scenario. This scenario is based on the idea that
we don't know whether or not the bottom is in, which means we must use the
entire distribution (correction plus recovery phases) of returns for the
previous bear markets.
When you
do that and peek one year in the future the result is that the most likely
price zone for Bitcoin is between $15,000 and $20,000. Let’s be honest, I’m
sure you’d take that in a year that might be marked by a global recession.
But if we
follow a bear market continuation scenario there is also a high chance to see
Bitcoin slide towards $10,000.
With the
recovery scenario we assume the bottom is in. That is we simulate the future
based on the returns of the recovery phases of the previous bear markets.
In that
case the most likely price range in one year from now is $27,000 to $33,000.
This is a +74% to +113% from the current bottom.
This kind
of annualized return is very much in the typical range of annualized returns
for Bitcoin.
on the low
range when it comes to Bitcoin. Not too bad for a bear market.
So what’s
the tl;dr? Making predictions is hard, especially about the future. But we can
make some reasonable assumption regarding the market regime we are in. And
based on those assumption and the history of previous bear markets we can
extrapolate a most likely range for the price a year from now:
● Under an assumption
that the bottom is not in $15k to $20k
is a likely range.
●
Under and assumption that the
bottom is in a $27k to $33k range is likely.
Those
predictions aren't really hopium grade but hey it is what it is. Don't expect
miracles during a bear market.
Bitcoin
metrics
Not gonna
lie, the on-chain data is pretty weak for Bitcoin. The activity is in deep bear
market territory.
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The whales
are hibernating… if that’s even a thing.
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And the
result is some tepid accumulation score.
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A total
lack of action. That's the main theme for Bitcoin at the moment. There is no
dynamic in the market. We are in a purely reactive mode:
● Some news about bad
actors in crypto... Bitcoin drops.
●
Some news about macro... Bitcoin... does something.
But by and
large there is very little volatility and basically no direction in the market.
There is no trend. The price action is at the mercy of good and bad news.
Meaning it is still time to be cautious.






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