Bitcoin is extremely volatile, involving price surges and reversals which could sweep away millions of dollars in a matter of minutes. Given the digital currency's absence of foundations or links to the real economy, those fluctuations are frequently puzzling to market observers. Another oddity incorporated into the code that gave birth to Bitcoin is that the formula that regulates the rate at which new tokens are issued changes on a regular basis. As another halving event approaches, Bitcoin fans and doubters debate what effect it will have on the coin's value.
One of the features that sparked interest in Bitcoin was the way its developer, Satoshi Nakamoto, linked the generation of coins to the activity required to prevent counterfeiting. Bitcoin is created by miners, whose computers conduct difficult calculations to validate transactions on the blockchain, a public digital ledger. Miners compete against one another to acquire newly issued tokens known as block rewards.
What exactly is Bitcoin halving?
A halving, also known as halvening, is a deliberate reduction in the incentives given to miners (the term is stated in Bitcoin’s code). Halvings occur every four years, or roughly every 210,000 blocks of transactions. Each one, as the name implies, decreases the amount of Bitcoin miners receive per block reward in half. Miners received 50 Bitcoin per block when Bitcoin originally launched in 2009, but that incentive was lowered to 25 in the first halving in 2012, 12.5 in 2016, 6.25 tokens in 2020, and 3.125 coins in 2024.
What is the point of halving?
Bitcoin is restricted in numerous ways. For one thing, only 21 million will ever be produced, according to its establishing protocol. Many people are concerned that fiat money, such as that issued by governments, would lose value due to inflation if too much is printed. Bitcoin, on the other hand, supporters claim, will always rise in value. Halving also prevents inflation by periodically slowing the rate at which Bitcoin are created so that supply does not exceed demand. Other observers see halvings as a buy-now signal, implying that slower growth may be accompanied by a price increase.
So, when will the next halving occur? The quadrennial event is scheduled for April 2024. In general, forecasting the precise date is difficult because the time it takes to generate new blocks might vary depending on a variety of factors. According to most predictions, there will be 64 Bitcoin halvings before the 21 million limit is reached around 2140, when halvings would cease. Once that occurs, miners will no longer receive incentives and will be forced to charge transaction fees, just like credit card firms.
Will the price of Bitcoin rise as a result of this event?
That is a contentious issue. For example, in the year following the 2012 reward decrease, Bitcoin surged about 8,000%, and again nearly 1,000% in the year following the 2016 cut. The previous halving, in May 2020, was followed by a bull run that culminated in a Bitcoin price of about $69,000 in November 2021. As of mid-April this year, Bitcoin had recovered over 67% of its value from a historic rout in 2022, to around $30,000. The next halving has the potential to result in an 81% increase. Skeptics contend that attributing price increases to halves is, at best, speculative. The second halving, for example, occurred at a time when Bitcoin was already acquiring widespread acceptance, and it coincided with a surge in initial coin offerings, many of which required Bitcoin to be purchased. However, the rebound has recently stuttered, hampered by cooling expectations of US Federal Reserve interest-rate reduction. A regulatory crackdown on cryptocurrency following the bankruptcy of the FTX exchange in November 2022 also affects the market outlook.
How much of an impact will it have on Bitcoin holders? Nothing much, because any subsequent price adjustment would either make us wealthy or poorer (LOL). However, it will be impossible to determine how much of the shift is directly due to the halves.