The market capitalizations of all cryptocurrencies in existence surpassed $2 trillion on April 5, according to data from Goingecko, led by the impressive growth of Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) and other altcoins in 2021.
The cryptocurrency market as a whole has become approximately as valuable as Apple, the second biggest company in the world after Saudi Arabia’s oil giant Aramco.
The milestone also comes less than three months after the cryptocurrency market surpassed $1 trillion for the first time back on Jan. 7 when the price of Bitcoin was around $33,000.
Will the Ethereum and altcoin bull market continue?
In recent months, several major catalysts have fueled both Bitcoin and Ethereum to rally strongly to new all-time highs.
Financial institutions, like PayPal and Visa, are beginning to actively support cryptocurrencies as Bitcoin was leading the cryptocurrency market’s uptrend.
In 2021, Bitcoin has faced several short-term corrections but has now consistently remained above the $50,000 for almost a month with low volatility compared to altcoins, preventing both ETH and the altcoin market from seeing a severe pullback.
In fact, Bitcoin’s volatility has dropped to the lowest level since November 2020 as BTC price has been consolidating between $55,000 and $60,000 over the past few days.
A pseudonymous trader known as “Rekt Capital” attributed the strong performance of ETH to Bitcoin’s consolidating under $60,000. He wrote:
“#BTC is still just consolidating inside this range It is this consolidation that has helped $ETH breakout to new All Time Highs #ETH is arguably leading the market whereas $BTC is trying to catch up Good sign so far is that orange resistance is struggling to reject #Bitcoin.”
Jonathan Habicht, a partner at Moonrock Capital, said:
“I know so many people who are just waiting to increase their $BTC $ETH and major Altcoin positions during larger dips and they are surely not the only ones. Bear market is not an option for the foreseeable future.”
As long as the strength of the ETH/BTC pair remains intact and Bitcoin does not see a major sell-off, the cryptocurrency market’s short-term outlook remains highly optimistic for April and into the summer.
Coinbase IPO buoying market sentiment
On April 2, Coinbase, the top U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, announced that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved Coinbase’s S-1 filing.
Coinbase is expected to be listed on the Nasdaq exchange on April 14, making it a publicly-traded company in the U.S. stock market. The company said:
“We’re happy to announce that earlier today, the SEC declared our S-1 registration statement effective and that we expect our direct listing to occur on April 14, 2021, with our Class A common stock trading on the @NASDAQ under the ticker symbol COIN.”
The listing of Coinbase in the U.S. stock market would likely cause the demand for cryptocurrencies to increase because it would attract the eyes of investors in the traditional financial market.
Depending on the performance of the stock, it could also lead exchange tokens such as BNB, FTT, Huobi Token, SUSHI, UNI, and others to rally, mirroring the momentum of COIN.
At the same time, some analysts believe that Coinbase’s IPO may bring major volatility if not downward price pressure on the cryptocurrency market as the date aligns with a big BTC options expiry date.
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