Crypto
Social Media’s Effect on Social Media’s Effect on Cryptocurrency Volatility
Social media popularity and cryptocurrency price trends are joined at the hip. This fact is true both in the extreme representations like Dogecoin and the standard cryptocurrencies that dominate normal discourse.
There is a case to be made that cryptocurrency could not grow this big were it not for the social media age. Bitcoin’s rise as a peer-to-peer coin took off in the early 2010s as Facebook and Twitter became part of everyday life. Meme coins like Dogecoin and PEPE are recent trends that perfectly illustrate the power of social media popularity and notoriety for cryptocurrencies.
Meme Coins As The Ultimate Symbol Of Crypto Notoriety
Around 2019, Elon Musk and a few other Twitter (now X) users started making jokes about Dogecoin. Soon enough, this meme coin went off and had rallies of over 1000% on specific days. Dogecoin would rally because its community of users were on board a rocket ship “to the moon.”
Meme coins like PEPE capture this connection very well. PEPE is inspired by the “Pepe the Frog” meme popular on right-wing chat boards. Once the PEPE token launched in mid-2023, it was an instant hit because of the power of the underlying meme. As of September 2024 PEPE has a market cap of $4 billion according to Binance. This makes it the 27th largest cryptocurrency in the entire market.
Cryptocurrencies benefit tremendously from social media traction. It is probably the most direct way of gauging crypto market sentiment and confidence. Some of this activity is unfortunately not organic and is part of elaborate pumping schemes by token promoters.
In a general sense, cryptocurrencies experience volatility based on social media activity. The ones that rely the most on social media sentiment experience the highest volatility levels. It is not surprising that Dogecoin had dramatic crashes after its historic rallies in 2019 and 2020.
Social Media And Crypto
The crypto sector started as a fringe sector in specific corners of the internet. It took around three years after Bitcoin launched for it to begin getting traction. In 2013, an infamous event occurred with the shutting down of the Silk Road marketplace which was a libertarian trading hub for all goods, including illegal items using Bitcoin.
Regardless, the marketplace displayed the power of internet socialization in crypto usage. This was a community of users that interacted in a decentralized manner and managed to pay for goods and services using virtual currencies.
Bitcoin quickly became a social media topic, and by 2017, Bitcoin price became a constant topic on Twitter. In late 2017, Bitcoin had its first epic rally in the social media age and caught the imagination of netizens.
Hype Is Key In Crypto
For traders, the challenge is understanding which cryptocurrencies have organic social media hype. Crypto traders will always talk up their investments, and it is tough to filter out the noise from genuine enthusiasm.
Social media has played a pivotal role in propelling this industry to where it is. After all, there is no way an asset class outside mainstream finance could establish itself without social media. A balanced way to use the information is to use social media traction as one of the parameters of a cryptocurrency’s performance rather than the sole determiner.
Crypto
Exclusive: White House set to meet with banks, crypto companies to broker legislation compromise
Jan 28 (Reuters) – The White House on Monday will meet with executives from the banking and cryptocurrency industries to discuss a path forward for landmark crypto legislation which has stalled due to a clash between the two powerful sectors, said three industry sources.
The summit hosted by the White House’s crypto council will include executives from several trade groups. It will focus on how the bill treats interest and other rewards crypto firms can dish out on customer holdings of dollar-pegged tokens known as stablecoins, the people said.
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Reuters was first to report the meeting.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The sources declined to be identified discussing private policy discussions.
“We look forward to continuing to work with policymakers across the aisle so Congress can advance lasting market structure legislation and ensure the United States remains the crypto capital of the world,” she said.
Cody Carbone, CEO of The Digital Chamber, another major crypto trade group, credited the White House with “pulling all sides to the negotiating table.”
The Senate has for months been working on the bill, dubbed the Clarity Act, which aims to create federal rules for digital assets, the culmination of years of crypto industry lobbying. Crypto companies have long argued that existing rules are inadequate for digital assets, and that legislation is essential for companies to continue to operate with legal certainty in the U.S.
The House of Representatives passed its version of the bill in July.
The Senate Banking Committee was scheduled earlier this month to debate and vote on the bill, but the meeting was postponed at the last minute, in part due to concerns among lawmakers and both industries over the interest issue.
Crypto companies say providing rewards such as interest is crucial for recruiting new customers and that barring them from doing so would be anti-competitive. Banks say the increased competition could result in insured lenders experiencing an exodus of deposits — the primary source of funding for most banks — potentially threatening financial stability.
That bill prohibited stablecoin issuers from paying interest on cryptocurrencies, but banks say it left open a loophole that would allow for third parties – such as crypto exchanges – to pay yield on tokens, creating new competition for deposits.
Reporting by Hannah Lang in New York; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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