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Sign of Bear Market: “Blockchain” Takes Over “Crypto” on Google Trends Sign of Bear Market: “Blockchain” Takes Over “Crypto” on Google Trends
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Sign of Bear Market: “Blockchain” Takes Over “Crypto” on Google Trends

Sign of Bear Market: “Blockchain” Takes Over “Crypto” on Google Trends

Photo by Hans Veth on Unsplash

On Google Trends, the keyword “blockchain” has surpassed “crypto” in popularity in recent months, suggesting that the demand for the asset class has dropped in comparison to the underlying technology.

Throughout the past eleven months, since January, the cryptocurrency market has suffered a 75 percent drop in valuation from $800 billion to $200 billion, as major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum lost nearly 70 percent of their value.

For over three months since August, the cryptocurrency market has shown yearly low trading activity and volume, leading analysts to speculate that the bottom of the market is near. Technical analyst Hsaka said:

“To be honest, with volume and volatility petering out, I wouldn’t be surprised to see BTC hold this range for another month (and maybe till the EOY too). Would be the path of maximum pain, bears don’t get their rapid selloff to 4.8k, bulls distraught over not being able to break 6.8k”.

What Blockchain Taking Over Crypto Means

As seen in the struggles of technology behemoths IBM and Microsoft to convince large-scale conglomerates and supply chain operators to adopt private blockchain networks, the blockchain has not demonstrated its potential over the past three years.

Banks, financial institutions, and technology firms have allocated billions of dollars per year to develop enterprise-grade blockchain networks with a focus on scalability over security. Yet, the blockchain has not seen massive mainstream adoption.

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Ripple Labs, considering the utilization of the Ripple network by Banco Santander’s new mobile application and 61 major banks in Japan, has shown some potential of the blockchain’s current applicability in traditional finance.

In general, however, companies have found it challenging to integrate the blockchain into existing infrastructures of large platforms.

Rolf Jansen, the CEO of Hapag-Lloyd, a transnational German-based transportation giant, stated that conglomerates have been skeptical towards the adoption of private blockchain networks because the core purpose of a blockchain is to eliminate trust and private networks involve trust at a certain level.

“Technically the solution (by Maersk and IBM) could be a good platform, but it will require a governance that makes it an industry platform and not just a platform for Maersk and IBM. This is the weakness we’re currently seeing in many of these initiatives, as each individual project claims to offer an industry platform that they themselves control. This is self-contradictory.”

In contrast to the private blockchain industry, the cryptocurrency sector has seen many of the most positive developments in its 10-year history. ICE/NYSE-backed Bakkt announced the launch of a Bitcoin futures market while Goldman Sachs is preparing to clear cryptocurrency derivatives in the short-term, and leading banks like Morgan Stanley are currently testing cryptocurrency-related systems.

Yet, the trend of the term “crypto” and “cryptocurrency” has been on a decline and have been taken over by a keyword that represents a stagnant industry struggling to find significant success throughout the year.

What Can Lead the Recovery?

On Oct. 10, speaking to MarketWatch, Think Markets U.K. chief market analyst Naeem Aslam stated that the cryptocurrency market needs a big catalyst to drive a strong recovery to previous resistance levels, Aslam said:

“Bitcoin needs some sort of a blessing and only that can revitalize the rally for the currency,”

But, as of now, eleven months in a bear market, it is evident that the demand for crypto from retail traders has noticeably decreased as shown by Google Trends and the low volume in the cryptocurrency exchange market.

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