The below is an excerpt from a recent edition of Bitcoin Magazine Pro, Bitcoin Magazine’s premium markets newsletter. To be among the first to receive these insights and other on-chain bitcoin market analysis straight to your inbox, <\/em><\/strong>subscribe now<\/a>.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n This week\u2019s topics<\/p>\n Monumental SEC failureBitcoin ETF multipleGerman economic updateTaiwan elections and China response<\/p>\n Bitcoin is a great teacher. Many of us have learned so much, from studying and following Bitcoin over the years, not just about money but about life. Once again, Bitcoin provides us with a teachable moment in the hack of the SEC\u2019s X\/Twitter account. First, even if you are a normie in favor of heavily regulated markets, this event should open your eyes to the fact that the regulators have grown into a systemic risk themselves. They are a risk to the investors they are supposed to protect. The SEC is even in a battle at the Supreme Court battle<\/a> over their in-house semi-judicial system.<\/p>\n Secondly, this scandal happened because the SEC didn\u2019t use 2FA, months after warning everyone about the use of 2FA. This shocking incompetence might wake many out there and spread the use of 2FA \u2014 something long overdue.<\/p>\n The total damage based on the SEC\u2019s failure was $30 billion wiped from the market cap with $90 million worth of open positions liquidated. Of course, the SEC did not apologize for their failure and will likely be facing legal consequences. Spicy take, this bitcoin-inspired scandal might result not only in us getting the ETFs approved, but also the SEC getting taken down a peg.<\/p>\n Estimates of inflows on the bitcoin ETF<\/a>\u2019s first days of trading are expected to be massive. Issuers have publicly stated<\/a> they are seeding their funds with $312.9 million so far. These are commitments by private players to immediately create shares to seed liquidity. This does not include other money from regular trading. <\/p>\n The fee structures submitted this week by issuers have clauses for introductory periods based on the inflow of assets under management. For example, ARK is offering a 0.0% management fee for the first 6 months or until $1 billion in AUM. Invesco is offering 0.0% for 6 months or $5 billion AUM. This means they expect those time periods and AUM to be a practical expectation. If we add up all these special fees discounts, we arrive at $13 billion of expected AUM growth in the first 6-12 months from 5 issuers alone. That does not mean inflows exactly because bitcoin bought earlier will appreciate adding to AUM.<\/p>\n Source: @JSeyff<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n The seeding funds are small potatoes compared to the total $25 trillion AUM of the issuers. If 1% were to come into the bitcoin ETFs over the first 12 months, that is $250 billion.<\/p>\n Back in 2021, near the ATH, Bank of America put out a study that bitcoin had a 118x multiplier<\/a> on inflow to market cap appreciation. So, for every $1 million in fresh buying, the market cap would increase by $118 million. That multiplier relies on many different factors, like speed of inflow, number of available bitcoin on exchanges, and block reward. Bank of America made their estimate when there were 2.7 million<\/a> BTC on exchanges, today there are only 1.8 million<\/a> \u2014 or 607,000 when considering the major US exchanges Coinbase, Gemini and Kraken only. In other words, the multiplier could be greater than 118x this time.<\/p>\n The largest single ETF launch in history saw $2 billion of inflows. The bitcoin ETF event promises to be bigger than that because it is a group of 11 ETFs and is a new asset class. $2 billion is therefore conservative, but we\u2019ll use it for our purposes here. $2 billion times 118 means $236 billion market appreciation on day one. The market cap at time of writing is $900 billion, meaning the first day move could be ~25%, taking us to $58,000.<\/p>\n People think it can\u2019t happen, that\u2019s why it is happening. Some Germans are beginning to understand the effect of deglobalization on their economic model, and the effect that communist climate policies will have on heavy industry. Large companies like BASF, Linde, and Volkswagen all have plans to move out of Germany. Energy-intensive industrial production is being hit the worst. 2024 is going to be a massive recessionary year around the world.<\/p>\n Source: Financial Times<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n The latest number for November showed the sixth straight month of industrial production, the worst stretch since the Great Financial Crisis.<\/p>\n Source: Bloomberg<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n Source: @SoberLook<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n One of the most consequential elections<\/a> this year is happening Saturday in Taiwan. As it stands, it is a three-way race for president with the more anti-China Democratic Progressive Party, Lai Ching-te, as the front-runner. He is friendly to the US and will be a thorn in the side of the CCP. Certainly, China has invested heavily in stopping him and spreading propaganda within Taiwan. Despite this, the anti-China candidate is still favored.<\/p>\n Source: NHK Japan Broadcasting Corporation<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n Source: Fulcrum Asset Management<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n This election has global consequences as you can imagine. In an article<\/a> yesterday on Bloomberg, they highlighted the possibility that the election of Lai could lead directly to conflict with China and potentially cost the global economy $10 trillion.<\/p>\n This is also happening as the Chinese economy is falling apart. Their blue-chip stock market<\/a> CSI 300, recently hit 5-year lows, standing in stark contrast to the US stock markets rallying to near ATHs. <\/p>\nSEC\u2019s 2FA Failure<\/h2>\n
Bitcoin Market Cap Multiple of Inflows<\/h2>\n
German De-industrialization<\/h2>\n
Taiwan Elections and China\u2019s Economic Disaster<\/h2>\n