According to the crypto data platform Ecoinometrics, investors should not sell the asset but accumulate more and hold bitcoin in preparation for the upcoming rally. The platform notes that the $50,000 mark now acts as the new base for the asset’s price rally defined by the growth range from the previous halving. Notably, after the last halving event, bitcoin struggled to break the $10,000 resistance level. Historically, the year after halving usually results in a spike in the asset’s price. Econometrics states that there were doubts about bitcoin’s prospect after 2020 halving, but the current price movement is testimony to the halving’s impact. Therefore, the next halving in 2024 will likely trigger a massive rally in price. Currently, bitcoin has erased the losses incurred on Tuesday, with the asset trading at $57,379, gaining 5.73% in the last 24 hours. Over the past one month, the asset has been holding its support above the $50,000 mark despite hitting an all-time high of $64,800 on April 14th.
Bitcoin nears mainstream adoption
The ongoing bitcoin bull run has seen the asset attain a market cap of over $1 trillion with increasing interest from institutional investors. This year, electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) invested $1.5 billion in bitcoin, while Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs plan to offer select clients exposure digital assets. Elsewhere, the asset has found footing in the payment space with Visa (NYSE: V) and PayPal (NASDAQ: PYPL) exposing cryptocurrencies to users. Besides the next halving, bitcoin is largely expected to hit the mainstream space after it emerged that hundreds of U.S. banks are planning to enable clients to buy, hold and sell bitcoin. The plan by crypto custody platform NYDIG is reportedly fronting the idea with banks willing to tap into the digital currency space amid increased crypto activity from their customers. [binance]