Ethereum Price Analysis - Golden cross on the horizon
Ethereum (ETH) is a distributed ledger and decentralized computing platform with smart contract capabilities. The crypto asset is currently second on the BraveNewCoin market cap table, with a market cap of US$23.05 billion and US$2.53 billion in trade volume over the past 24 hours.
The ETH project was proposed by Vitalik Buterin in 2013. Other co-founders include Anthony Di Iorio, Charles Hoskinson, Mihai Alisie, Amir Chetrit, Joseph Lubin, Gavin Wood, and Jeffrey Wilcke. An Initial Coin Offering (ICO) followed in 2014. The ICO raised nearly US$16 million, with each token selling for US$0.31. The ETH ICO would eventually become one of the most profitable in history.
The network mainnet went live in July 2015 with 72 million pre-mined coins, which currently accounts for 65.7% of the circulating supply. On Christmas day 2019, Wilcke sent 92,000 ETH, US$11.5 million, to the Kraken exchange, presumably to sell. ETH was launched with no vesting schedule or lock-in period for the pre-mined coins.
Thus far, protocol upgrade milestones have included; Olympic in May 2015, Frontier in July 2015, Homestead in March 2016, Metropolis Part 1: Byzantium in October 2017, Metropolis Part 2: Constantinople in February 2019, Istanbul in December 2019, and Muir Glacier in January 2020.
Ethereum is upgraded through a series of Ethereum Improvement Protocols (EIPs), which are then bundled into each hard fork. The Github repository for EIPs has been extremely active since January 2019.
Source: Github - EIPsIn total, almost 1,000 developers have contributed a cumulative 28,000 commits to the ETH project in the past year, across 228 Github repos. Most of the commits over the past year have occurred in the Solidity repo, the programming language used to write smart contracts on Ethereum.
Source: Github - solidityAn adjacent protocol overhaul, Serenity, is currently in development and includes a full
rewrite and redesign, which will result in Ethereum 2.0. Phase zero of the herculean task could launch as early as January 2020. Both versions of ETH will exist concurrently for some time before a migration is completed. Danny Ryan, Justin Drake, and Vitalik Buterin have the most commits in the ETH 2.0 repo.
Overall, ETH related repos have had more commits than any other crypto project over the past year. In December, Buterin also released an alternative proposal for merging ETH 1.0 to ETH 2.0 on an accelerated schedule and less re-architecturing.
Source: GitHub - eth2.0-specsETH 2.0 includes Sharding and Casper, which will drastically alter the network. Sharding refers to a scaling solution for horizontally partitioning data within a database. The full implementation of Casper, slated for release in 2022, will remove Proof of Work (PoW) from the network and replace it with Proof of Stake (PoS), with a block reward at 0.22 ETH/block. Currently, there are no plans to cap the total amount of ETH created.
Source: Hsiao-Wei WangWhile the network is still PoW based, Programmatic PoW (EIP 1057) may be implemented this year and is designed to reduce ASIC mining on a network by increasing the efficiency of GPU and FPGA mining. ProgPoW is only likely to be implemented if future hash rate increases are driven by ASICs Bitmain, Innosilicon, and PandaMiner all have at least three ASIC miners available for the EtHash algorithm, while a new ASIC mining chip from a fourth mining company, Linzhi, was released in October 2019.
If implemented, EIP 1057 will make all current Ethash ASICs unable to mine the chain. Those using Ethash ASICs may choose to continue mining the pre-fork chain. Another possibility is that ASICs will be used to mine the Ethereum Classic (ETC) chain, which also uses the Ethash algorithm. In any case, the goal of decreasing ASIC use on the ETH chain will be successful, although likely temporary. At US$0.04/KWh, all of the currently available Ethash ASICs are profitable. Mining profitability had increased since January, thanks to rising ETH prices, but remains near all-time lows and if ETH prices fall further, hash rate will likely follow suit.
Source: asicminervalueHash rate (solid line, chart below) has steadily increased from January lows. Difficulty (dashed line, chart below) had risen steadily since April 2019, becoming disconnected from hash rate in October. This rise in difficulty despite a fall in hash rate is coded into Ethereum and known as an Ice Age, or difficulty bomb, which has activated twice before on Ethereum, once in 2017 and once in late 2018.
The most recent Ice Age was meant to serve as a transition from ETH 1.0 to ETH 2.0 and phase out PoW mining completely. However, because ETH 2.0 is not currently ready, the Ice Age was pushed back another four million blocks, to block 13.2 million, via a hard fork on January 2nd.
Source: BitInfoChartsAverage block times are currently 13 seconds and blocks per day (line, chart below) are currently at an all-time high. There are nearly 109.5 million ETH in circulation with inflation per annum currently at 4.49% (fill, chart below), which sits near an all-time low. Despite record fast block times, pending transactions have been ranging between 70,000-100,000 over the past few days, with only a few smart contracts accounting for most of the transactions.
Source: CoinMetricsTether (USDT) was originally issued on the OMNI chain in 2015, but has been aggressively swapped to an ERC-20 token over the past few months. In total, over 70% of all circulating USDT is now on the ETH chain. ERC-20 transfers are both cheaper and faster than OMNI transfers, thus many exchanges have added the option for ERC-20 USDT in recent months.
ERC-20 USDT transactions per day (light green line, chart below) and average transaction values (light green fill, chart below) have quickly surpassed OMNI transactions per day (dark green line, chart below) and average transaction values (dark green fill, chart below). ERC-20 USDT transactions per day are now nearly 20x OMNI USDT transactions per day.
Source: CoinMetricsThe Ethereum network currently has 6,430 active network nodes, 25% of which currently syncing to the network, 36% of which are located in the United States and at least 40% of these nodes are running through Cloud hosting services. Due to the somewhat cumbersome hardware and time requirements of running a node, many of these nodes are run by Infura, or similar node servicers, who provide access to the network for developers. These services have become increasingly important as the blockchain continues to grow.
Nodes have several sync modes, with fast sync requiring approximately 335 GB of storage and a full archival node requiring over 4 TB of storage. To contrast, a Bitcoin full node requires just over 300 GB of storage.
The number of on-chain transactions per day (line, chart below) is currently 838,000, increasing from the late January low of 490,000. This remains up from a multi-year low of 430,000 in February 2019, but down from the record high of 1.24 million on January 9th, 2018.
The average transaction fee (fill, chart below) is currently US$0.185, down from over US$0.40 in late September 2019 and US$0.78 in March. On February 19th and March 18th, 2019, the average transaction fee spiked to US$1.22 and US$0.63 respectively. Fees had been rising, despite declining transactions per day, because of a lack of efficient scaling methods. In September 2019, miners voted to increase gas limits by 25%. Overall, fees are lower than during much of 2018 but rising slowly over the past month.
Source: CoinMetricsThe 30-day network value to estimated on-chain daily transactions (NVT) ratio (line, chart below) is currently 50, down from the three-year high of 108. A clear uptrend in NVT suggests a coin is overvalued based on its economic activity and utility, which should be seen as a bearish price indicator, whereas a downtrend in NVT suggests the opposite. An NVT holding below 30 would likely signify bullish market conditions, as was the case from April 2017 to May 2018.
Monthly active addresses (MAAs) have risen to nearly 400,000, representing close to a two-year high (fill, chart below). MAAs are up from a yearly low of 192,000 in February, but down from an all-time high of nearly 610,000 in January 2018. Overall, MAAs remain above levels seen throughout 2017 and earlier. Unique addresses continue to grow at a rapid rate, and are nearly 96.07 million (not shown). However, addresses can only be added to the network, and are never deleted.
Source: CoinMetricsThe month of May 2019 marked an almost 12 month high for ICO funding, thanks to Bitfinex’s non-ETH token raise, LEO. At the same time, Initial Exchange Offerings (IEO), where crowdsales are facilitated by an exchange, are increasing in popularity. However, these IEOs typically do not use ETH or have a native blockchain.
Globally, ICOs are increasingly moving away from public sales, likely due to fear of regulatory reproach and a shifting regulatory landscape. 2018 saw the highest number of ICOs, at 1,075, and the largest USD sum raised in one year, at US$21.48 billion. In 2019,123 token sales ended raising a total of US$3.265 billion. In contrast, the total USD raise in January 2018 was US$2.81 billion.
Transparent ICO treasury balances have reduced significantly from 2018 to present, both in USD value and in ETH quantity. May 2019 saw outflows totaling over 327,000 ETH, the largest of the entire year. In 2019, ICOs withdrew 1.24 million ETH and continued to hold just over one million ETH.
Since January 2020, ICOs have withdrawn nearly 750,000 ETH with Aragon, Kyber, Monetha, Mysterium, SingularDTV, Gnosis, and Status all withdrawing at least 10,000 ETH from their respective treasuries in January alone. DigixDAO stakeholders also approved a measure to return all treasury funds to investors, which should take place within Q2 2020.
Over the past 60 days, Gnosis withdrew 58,000 ETH and Monolith withdrew 44,000 ETH. The three largest remaining treasuries are Golem, Polkadot, and Aragon at 354,000 ETH, 306,000 ETH, and 108,000 ETH, respectively. Polkadot’s funds were frozen in November 2017 when a bug was executed which deleted a code library for the Parity multi-sig wallet.
The top Ethereum based dapps over the past week, ranked by volume, are led by DeFi and exchange dapps. The dice2.win dapp had the most transactions over the past week at a reported 46,000. IDEX and Synthetix have had the most transactions over the past week in the DeFi and exchange categories, respectively.
Overall, ETH has a considerably lower number of users and transactions compared to other dapp platforms like EOS (EOS) and Tronix (TRX), both of which have no transaction fees. In February 2019, Twitter user Kevin Rooke pointed out that of the 1,375 ETH dapps, 86% had zero users and 93% had zero transaction volume.
Source: DappRadarThe Decentralized Finance movement, or DeFi, has increasingly gained in popularity with the total ETH held in DeFi currently at 2.7 million ETH or US$880 million. Lending dapps have seen the biggest influx of money as their products began to provide a return for users. The Maker DAO, which uses collateralized debt positions to back the semi-stablecoin Dai and Sai, currently holds around 50% of all ETH in the DeFi ecosystem.
Several DeFi incidents this year highlight the need for robust DeFi infrastructure and testing. bZx, the fifteenth-largest DeFi protocol with over US$2.5 million worth of funds locked currently, lost $350,000 and $645,000 worth of ETH in two separate exploits related to flash loans and price oracle manipulation. To remedy the exploit, bZk absorbed the losses and directed future cash flows to an insurance fund until the outstanding debt is paid.
Maker DAO also experienced a US$4.5 million loss following a price feed delay. Maker DAO has since added USDC as collateral and MKR governance tokens were diluted and auctioned to raise funds to cover for the shortage. The loss has now been fully paid.
Source: DefiPulseIn the markets, ETH exchange-traded volume over the past 24 hours has predominantly been led by Tether (USDT) pairs. Non-USDT stablecoin volume has slowly increased over the past six months, including USD Coin (USDC), Dai (DAI), Paxos-Standard (PAX), Gemini-dollar (GUSD), and TrueUSD (TUSD), but continues to remain a fraction of total traded volume. A CME Group ETH futures product is also rumored to be approved sometime this year by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
In Asia, the Korean Won (KRW) and Yen pairs have ETH at approximately US$208 and US$209, respectively. Together, both regions show relatively low interest in their fiat pairs, with nearly 1.30% of the total traded volume combined. A return of a significant premium in South Korea would signify a return to bull market conditions. Both the lack of premium and drop in trading pair percentage suggest a significant drop in retail trading on these South Korean exchanges.
In November 2019, the South Korean exchange Upbit reported 324,000 ETH, or about US$50 million, stolen during a cold wallet migration. Upbit has announced it will reimburse users through company funds. Over the past few years, South Korean exchanges have become a prime target for North Korean hackers, although no suspects for the most recent loss of funds are currently being released.
Worldwide Google Trends data for the term "Ethereum" spiked in July 2019 and February 2020, which matched a swift increase in price. Overall, searches for “Ethereum” remain down significantly from early 2018. A slow rise in searches for "Ethereum" preceded both highs in June 2017 and January 2018, likely signaling interest from new market participants at that time.
A 2015 study found a strong correlation between the Google Trends data and BTC price, while a May 2017 study concluded that when the U.S. Google "Bitcoin" searches increased dramatically, BTC price dropped.
Technical Analysis
The current ETH/USD spot price is down 85% from the all-time high set in January 2018, and down 27% from the February local high. However, the crypto asset remains up 95% from the March lows. Most crypto assets have held a 90%+ correlation with one another since the beginning of the year.
As a potential bullish trend resumes, roadmaps for future market movements can be found on high timeframes using Exponential Moving Averages, Volume Profile Visible Range, Pitchforks, Ichimoku Cloud, and divergences. Further background information on the technical analysis discussed below can be found here.
On the daily chart for the ETH/USD pair, the 50-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) and 200-day EMA Golden Cross on February 11th was quickly followed by a bearish Death Cross on March 19th. Over the next few days, these key EMAs will recross bullish once again and will now act as support at US$181.
Based on the Volume Profile Visible Range (VPVR - horizontal bars, chart below), the current spot price now sits just below the US$215 to US$230 resistance node. Yearly Pivots, or mathematical support and resistance based on the highs and lows of the previous year, also sit at US$200 and US$295. There are no RSI or volume divergences on the daily chart at this time.
The long/short open interest on Bitfinex (top panel, chart below) is currently 92% long with long positions continuing to push new all-time highs over the past month. Notional long open interest is also at an all-time high of US$300 million (not shown). A significant price movement downwards will result in an exaggerated move further, as the long positions will continue to unwind. This is known as a “long squeeze.” However, Bitfinex long/short ratios have historically had little bearing on Ethereum price action.
This market has also potentially established a new bullish Pitchfork (PF). Once the trend is defined, the spot price will continually attempt to return to the median line (yellow), currently at US$250. A bullish PF is invalidated once the spot price falls below the lowest support, currently at the psychological level of US$100. The uppermost resistance currently sits at US$603.
Turning to the Ichimoku Cloud, four metrics are used to indicate if a trend exists; the current price in relation to the Cloud, the color of the Cloud (red for bearish, green for bullish), the Tenkan (T) and Kijun (K) cross, and the Lagging Span. The best entry always occurs when most of the signals flip from bearish to bullish, or vice versa.
The status of the current Cloud metrics on the daily time frame with doubled settings (20/60/120/30), for more accurate signals, are bullish; the spot price is above the Cloud, the Cloud is bearish, the TK cross is bullish, and the Lagging Span is inside of the Cloud and above the current spot price. A long flat Kumo at US$190 should act as a magnet for price. The Cloud metrics will turn fully bullish with a Kumo twist, likely to happen later this week.
Lastly, on the daily ETH/BTC chart, trend indicators are neutral with a slightly bullish 50-day EMA and 200-day EMA cross and a spot price just above the Cloud. The spot price is now re-entering a key long term support and resistance and Yearly Pivot level of 0.025 BTC. Further upside will likely find resistance at the VPVR and psychological level of 0.03, as well as the Yearly Pivot at 0.0345 BTC. There are also no bullish or bearish divergences on RSI or volume at this time. ETH/BTC open interest on Bitfinex is 99% long (not shown).
Conclusion
On-chain fundamentals including hash rate, transactions per day, and daily active addresses, have increased over the past two months, and are up significantly from year-end 2019 lows. The ProgPoW consensus algorithm change is not likely coming this year, a change that would drastically alter the current Ethash mining landscape. Although ETH 2.0 is still in the early stages of development, the new protocol is actively being discussed, debated, and coded, with a phase zero release slated for sometime later this year.
The amount of ETH locked in DeFi apps has increased significantly over the past year as ETH held by ICO treasuries continued to decrease, potentially providing a new avenue to decrease the circulating ETH supply. New ICOs on the ETH chain have trended toward zero throughout 2019 and early 2020. As DeFi usage increases, on-chain metrics need to be retooled to better represent and include smart contract activity, such as Dai and Sai transfers. NVT, an inverse metric of economic utility, is currently increasing, despite significant DeFi activity.
Technicals are bullish for the ETH/USD pair based on current trend metrics, as the spot price is currently above both the 200-day EMA and the daily Cloud. A Golden Cross of the 50 and 200 day EMA within the next week would increase the likelihood of future bullish continuation. Over the next few months, a target of US$285 to US$300 is likely based on newly established bullish PF and yearly pivots.
Technicals for the ETH/BTC pair are neutral to bullish based on trend metrics, as the spot price is currently above the 200-day EMA and above the daily Cloud. In the near term, price will need to breach resistance and consolidate near the 0.025 BTC level. Overall, this may lead to the first sign of bullish continuation for the pair since ICOs peaked in mid 2018.
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Josh Olszewicz, Khareem Sudlow