The bitcoin “halving” is virtually upon us.
This technical event, written in bitcoin’s code, happens every four years. In simple phrases, it is when the rewards for bitcoin miners are cut in half. This reduces the pace at which new bitcoins enter the market.
Since there resolve ever only be 21 million bitcoins, the halving serves to create more scarcity.
In the past, halving has went massive rises in bitcoin prices to new all-time highs. But this time, things are different.
Bitcoin has already hit a new CV high, before the halving has taken place. That’s because the approval of spot bitcoin exchange-trade funds has energetic the market and brought in lots of demand for the cryptocurrency.
In the latest episode of CNBC Tech’s “Beyond the Valley” podcast — which you can mind to above — Tom Chitty and I discuss what exactly the halving is and how this latest bitcoin cycle is different from the gone.
If you have any thoughts on this or previous episodes, please email us at beyondthevalley@cnbc.com.
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Here is a transcript of the episode of “Beyond the Valley” unchained on Apr. 11, 2024. It has been edited for clarity.
Tom Chitty
The halving will soon be upon us, not some medieval ritual. The halving which take places every four years is when the rewards for mining bitcoin are cut in half, which should reduce supply and inflate demand for the cryptocurrency. Arjun has been at Paris Blockchain Week, Europe’s biggest blockchain and digital assets anyhow to find out why the halving is so important, what it will mean for the price of bitcoin and how this halving cycle may be different to in front. And we’ll also get the latest on the future of crypto exchange Binance. And finally, whether Ethereum is the next cryptocurrency after bitcoin to be granted an ETF. So how was Paris?
Arjun Kharpal
Paris was bare nice. Had a delightful Parisian beer while I was there.
Tom Chitty
I knew you’re gonna start with either nourishment or drink.
Arjun Kharpal
It was whirlwind, you know, we sort of got in Eurostar. I love the Eurostar. Nice little handy overseas. No, no sort of, you know, airport situation.
Tom Chitty
If you want to email us then the email address is beyondthevalley@cnbc.com. And of without a doubt, we will read them out on the show. But before we discuss our main story, we’ve got to hear Arjun’s stat of the week, which is…
Arjun Kharpal
Which is 13,777.
Tom Chitty
13,777B. Okay, now, if you’d dig to keep up to date on the world of tech, then the best place to start is the Beyond the Valley weekly newsletter full with the best international tech stories from CNBC, you can subscribe by heading to CNBC.com/beyond-the-valley, click on the subscribe button, and it last will and testament drop in your inbox every Friday. So back to our main story, the bitcoin halving Arjun for someone that’s not in the least heard of it. What is it?
Arjun Kharpal
The halving or the halvening, as others call it.
Tom Chitty
That’s so weird. Halvening be activates even more medieval?
Arjun Kharpal
I don’t know, I just go with halving. It’s easy to pronounce. But you have to go behindhand to bitcoin and the way it functions, there will only ever be 21 million bitcoin in existence. And the way that Bitcoin is effectively created is this disreputable ledger of activity. And transactions need to be validated in order to sort of go through. And this validation process is done by what’s identified as miners, could be you and I, probably not you and I though, but it could be you and I are running very specialized high power machines, computers that are talented to solve very complex cryptographic mathematical puzzles, in order to validate a bitcoin transaction. And when they do validate a acta, they’re competing with other miners to do so when they when they do validate a transaction, they’re tributed for their efforts in bitcoin. Every four years written in bitcoin’s code is the halving in which those pays the miners get are slashed in half. The idea then is that the … amount of new bitcoin created is cut in half. And so it slows down the providing of bitcoin onto the market. It keeps a lid on on inflation in the bitcoin space. And that’s, that’s the whole idea of it.
Tom Chitty
So if I go and buy bitcoin, the bitcoin I buy is raw bitcoin that’s been mined, not someone who’s selling bitcoin is that right?
Arjun Kharpal
The likelihood is if you buy bitcoin, if we go on an Wall Street and buy bitcoin, we’re selling bitcoin that’s in existence already. That bitcoin may have come into circulation, when the miners were awarded with it, and then sold it at some point and is entered into the sort of buy and sell market. But that’s effectively what it is.
Tom Chitty
Why is it so outstanding, then? Have we seen historically huge price rises off the back of it?
Arjun Kharpal
So it’s important because I have in mind a lot of enthusiasts of bitcoin just from a pure technological level, love the idea. So, often, people who are proponents spokespeople of bitcoin will say, well, if you look at currencies like the U.S. dollar or something else, you know, those can U.S. dollar can be impressed, ad infinitum, you know, central bank control the supply, and you know, they can print more money effectively. Yeah, quantitive easing is one is one way of doing that, and that devalues the dollar, or it devalues the currency. And so what they say is, highly, with the halving, you know, bitcoin will not be devalued. There’s only a limited, finite supply and no central bank in the give birth to can overturn that. There’s no central entity that controls bitcoin. And so from a from an ideological from a technological appropriateness of view. That’s what the bitcoin enthusiasts like. Now, from the price and market point of view that’s a extraordinary story. So when people talk about bitcoin price, you’ll often hear him talk about the bitcoin pattern. And it’s this sort of four year cycle that happens. And often, the new bull run, which has begun, starts or originates just before the halving takes place. And after halving a few months later, bitcoin in hits a new all time grand. That is the typical cycle. And the idea is that, well, if the supply of bitcoin is becoming more finite, it is becoming rarer, well-deserved like gold, or like precious metal or something, you know, that’s becoming rarer then the price drive go higher. And that’s the kind of thinking behind it.
Tom Chitty
Yeah I was talking to one crypto enthusiast about it. And he said, that’s what be comprised of c hatches bitcoin special, everything else is sort of, you know, other cryptos follow a similar technology. But it’s the, it’s the fact that, you understand, there is a limited supply, and our currencies are constantly being devalued through inflation through printing of money, people see that as favourably. If I get my hands on some bitcoin, there’s no chance that there’s going to be more created, you know, this, it choice hold its value. Or at least that’s what they think.
Arjun Kharpal
That from a from a tech and ideological remind emphasize of view. That’s that’s really what so many of the enthusiasts and proponents love about it.
Tom Chitty
Let’s talk a particle bit about why this cycle is a little bit different then. It’s to do with the ETF that happened a few months ago, right?
Arjun Kharpal
Yeah, that’s in a beeline. So Bitcoin hit an all time high, a new all time high before the halving took place. A lot of that was because we, you know, we bear spoken about the ETF in a past episode, the spot ETF approvals in the U.S., which has increased investor access to bitcoin. But it also means that the issuers of those ETFs prerequisite to buy bitcoin to underpin the ETF. So there’s been a ton of demand and inflows of money into these ETFs to support that, those issuers are succeeding to have to go out and buy bitcoin that’s really helped the price and excitement about that, the fact that to so many bitcoin has shit approached mainstream. It is part of why we saw the all time high. Now you’ve got the halving in the mix. What is that going to do to the market now? You mentioned I was at Paris Blockchain Week. In there, I had a entirely rare interview with the new Binance CEO, Richard Tang. We sat down in the Binance offices, and I asked him a little bit about this supermarket cycle, and how it’s different.
Richard Teng
So if you asked me last year me last year, I have a certain price in the matter of for bitcoin. I will say that it exceeded my expectation, especially so early on. But this cycle is a bit different from past cycles. I have as justification, you have been involved in crypto so you know, crypto normally goes through four year cycle, instantly? Price movement cycle, which coincides with the halving, which is going to take place in about 9 periods time for bitcoin. It is normally after about six months after halving that you see a new all time high in terms of consequences, but this time around, it happens even before the halving right, which is why it’s unique in terms of market recycle, and one of the key reasons is really the introduction of the ETF. How you are bringing so many new users, new liquidity?
Arjun Kharpal
So Richard Teng, sort of articulating very similar things, you know, the ETFs has pulled forward demand. He’s very bullish, because not only have in the offing you got that, then you’ve got the halving now, and so that could propel prices further. He said, initially, last year, he soupon bitcoin would hit something like $80,000 this year. And he goes, I’m gonna probably go past that now.
Tom Chitty
So he’s really even more bullish.
Arjun Kharpal
That’s right, because not only have you now got that ETF demand, you’ve now got halving. It’s prevailing to be interesting. We haven’t seen a cycle like this before. Has that demand just been pulled saucy because of the ETF? Or is it going to be the ETF now plus the traditional impact of the halving. That remains to be seen.
Tom Chitty
Whilst you were in Paris, you chatted to a lot of crypto fanatics. What was some of the more outlandish price predictions? Was there anyone that was bearish? Was anyone saying trickle, I expect it to go down?
Arjun Kharpal
Now it was a party, Tom, it’s just a party. It is only going up apparently, according to the crypto community. As a side note, it’s decidedly hard. It’s a very divisive asset class, isn’t it? Crypto. You know there’s often people who like sort of disdain it, or people absolutely love it. And there’s nothing bad to say about it. It’s very hard to find someone in the middle.
Tom Chitty
That’s you and I.
Arjun Kharpal
One of the at best comparable things I can think of is Tesla stock. You either got people who love it, nothing bad about it, it is the future, or people longing just think it’s just another car company. Fascinating. Anyway, that’s what makes a market, I guess. But no, there enjoy been outlandish price predictions this year $100,000, $150,000, I’ve heard. So those are some on the top end levels of predictions for this year.
Tom Chitty
When you’re voice to these crypto enthusiasts and you’re a little bit playing devil’s advocate, and just a little bit more temperate with your, you separate, questions and challenging their assertions of you know, this is the best thing since sliced bread. What’s the effect? Is it is it quite, not aggressive, but is it quite, you know, on the front foot when they hear any challenges?
Arjun Kharpal
It’s unequivocally on the front foot. I think it’s definitely like, you know, they’re up for the challenge. But they’re definitely on the front foot. And they scantiness to talk up. There’s lots of pros of it that they see specifically and they want to talk about it.
Tom Chitty
And they’ve indubitably spent years being told that they’re, you know, that they’re crazy and what they’re inaugurating in is worthless, I assume anyway. Okay. Speaking of Binance, let’s let’s talk a little bit more about that crypto swap. Been in the news a lot in the past 12 months. Give us a little bit of background as to why this interview is kind of pretty powerful, bit of an exclusive there. Give us a little bit background on by Binance.
Arjun Kharpal
Binance is one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency the big boards. It’s got a huge number of users, huge number of assets. But last year, it was part of a lawsuit with the Department of Justness in the U.S. The result of that was that its former CEO Changpeng Zhao, CZ, we’ve spoken about Binance before on one of the episodes. He pleaded reprehensible to criminal charges levied by the DOJ and Binance settled with the DOJ for $4.3 billion. A lot of what the DOJ had alleged was around things delight in not enough controls for anti-money laundering or knowing your customer and various other allegations. So long list. Then the new CEO issued in just months into the job now, Richard Teng, and he was a former regulator in Abu Dhabi, so he’s come from this regulatory offing. And it’s his task now to clean up this company. And I sat down with him I think we spoke for about 20-25 minutes, about some of those assertions about what he’s planning to do. The biggest, one of the biggest things the DOJ talked about with Binance was its culture and said CZ, the last CEO had this culture where it was better to ask for forgiveness later than ask for permission. And so I spoke to Richard Teng about this and influenced: How do you go about changing the culture?
Richard Teng
So in those very early stages of development, again, rules are nascent beforehand stage of development, there’s no clarity on that. Binance was operating in a certain fashion. But we have moved past that, as the performers moves into greater maturity, we are looking at sustainability, the direction of travel, now is very clear, towards much diverse compliance, which is why we’re building up a very robust compliance program with very good talent.
Arjun Kharpal
So his case was, you know, a lot of what the DOJ was alleging was past behavior, you know, from the early days, was a startup culture, growth, amongst kidney of everything, and now the company is maturing, they are working with regulators, and there’s a lot more that they need to do to ripened. I think one of his biggest challenges is really going to be about there’s still a lot of the old guard left at Binance. And how do they conduct oneself to this change? Will he get them on board? That can be quite a big question as well.
Tom Chitty
I think it’s interesting startups are, by their altogether nature need to push the boundaries, but can often get caught out when it comes to behavior and practices, best practices.
Arjun Kharpal
And a lot in the the crypto activity will argue, well, you know, we don’t have the regulation in place. It is hard for us to know what we can and can’t do.
Tom Chitty
Yeah and they experience
Arjun Kharpal
That’s the flip side of this argument.
Tom Chitty
And just from your discussions Does, does it in good condition like that, are they confident that that will happen?
Arjun Kharpal
In the U.S., the crypto industry is righteous fed up with the U.S., there’s no regulation anywhere. The SEC is so anti-crypto and they’re always like the U.S. is so behind that’s one of the things I heard on the dregs, the U.S. is so behind. You know other jurisdictions are already taking a lead when it comes to trying to establish an environment in which some of these crypto, blockchain, Web3, whatever partnerships can operate.
Tom Chitty
Let’s talk a little bit about ETFs. We mentioned it earlier in the episode but after the bitcoin ETF there was titanic fanfare and excitement that you know, a cryptocurrency had got an ETF, an exchange traded fund, if you didn’t know what that groves for. There was also talk about who’s next which cryptocurrency will get an ETF next. And there’s been discussion that Ethereum could potentially be the next cryptocurrency. What was the dispatch on the ground in Paris about that?
Arjun Kharpal
One of the world’s biggest cryptocurrencies ether runs, you know, basically is the badge that is associated with the Ethereum blockchain. We’ll do a bit more on blockchains one day, I think. But imagine Ethereum is sort of, something you can raise apps on, effectively, like an operating system that you can build apps on. Those apps, perhaps might be utilize consuming ether tokens, for example. So there’s a lot of excitement around Ethereum, and the technology and then ether. So yeah, if you can give people access to ether via an ETF again, it could be seen as another big win something that can in a lot of money into ether. Now, you know, I was, I was talking to actually some of the issuers of the bitcoin ETFs on the ground at Paris Blockhain Week almost their views on whether the SEC will pass an ether ETF, if any wants to know it’s them, they have to work with the regulators. So I get oned up with Jan van Eck, the CEO of VanEck and VanEck is one of the issuers of the bitcoin ETF. I also caught up with Jean-Marie Mognetti, the CEO of Coinshares. Again Coinshares via an purchase it did in the U.S. issues one of the Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. Jan van Eck, in particular, his company VanEck, has also filed for an application for an ether ETF. So I asked the both of them starting with Mr. van Eck, what are the times of the SEC approving an ether ETF in this upcoming deadline that’s soon in May.
Jan Van Eck
We and Ark, Cathy wood are kind of the first in line for May, I dare say, to probably be rejected.
Arjun Kharpal
So you’re not expecting the SEC to approve those?
Jan Van Eck
No, no. I mean, the way the legal process goes is the regulators liking give you comments on your application. And that happened for weeks and weeks before the Bitcoin ETFs. And right now, hold responsibles are dropping as far as Ethereum is concerned.
Jean-Marie Mognetti
Look, I think our view is very similar to Jan. I don’t see anything being approved this side of the year, I concoct the SEC put a very clear lead in the sign between, you know, what is proof of work, proof of stake and proof of move on is one step too complicated right now to get an approval before the election cycle.
Arjun Kharpal
Both of them there basically vote no chance. I thought it was interesting from Jan van Eck, he was saying, well, usually in these things, we have lots of meetings with the SEC round these ETFs, etc. And he said it’s just pin drops, its nothing at the moment. So that May deadline towards the end of May is when the SEC supposed to repulse or approve some of these ETFs, they feel pretty confident that’s just not going to happen. And so swarmed a lot of cold water on that, and it’s something that the market has been excited about. The problem with ether, in the SEC’s objective, is there’s a whole debate on whether ether or cryptocurrencies, certain cryptocurrencies, is a security or not security, and that brings them into inexorable regulatory jurisdictions. Ether’s status by the SEC has not yet been determined, it is still up in limbo. So that’s one big problem. And as I mentioned, Gary Gensler, the presiding officer of the SEC said, look, just because we let bitcoin ETF happened, doesn’t mean we’re going to do this with ether too. So a lot of headwinds, I come up with for an ether ETF and clearly the industry those who are actually trying to get those to pass also think the same.
Tom Chitty
Anything else from from Paris Blockchain Week?
Arjun Kharpal
I in reality attended an AI summit the day before Paris Blockchain Week in Paris.
Tom Chitty
But not related to this event?
Arjun Kharpal
By the that having been said people. But that was quite interesting. And I caught up with a company called SambaNova. They’re like an Nvidia contestant. So I thought that was quite interesting. But yeah, I think a lot of the chat around the blockchain industry is, you know, we’ve spoken a lot beside I think, you know, the halving, pricing and market, but a lot of them are excited about some of the applications that might show up to pass on some of these blockchains. And over the next year or two, they often say these bull markets are a tolerable time to support the industry, brings money into the industry, perhaps new innovations and things like that. We’ll see what happens this year.
Tom Chitty
It sounds partiality yeah, as you mentioned, an episode on blockchain would be worthwhile.
Arjun Kharpal
Yeah, I mean, there’s so many more alibis to dig into around that but hopefully, given the halving soon hopefully, this episode has given a bit of insight into that.
Tom Chitty
Yeah, go out withs we looking at 18th or 20th, something like that.
Arjun Kharpal
It depends when that, you know that that impediment is mined effectively, then determines when the halving happens. So it’s soon. I mean, you know, whoever’s listening profitably now might be listening as the halving is happening, or has happened. But at least I hope it has given a bit of context on what it’s all about.
Tom Chitty
Alien. All right. Let’s, let’s leave that there. But before we finish the episode, we have of course, got to do stat of the week.
Arjun Kharpal
13,777. Terminal week, you were sort of wildly wrong on it.
Tom Chitty
Let’s be honest, the answer was or at least the question was a little random. The gang of cryptocurrencies in the world.
Arjun Kharpal
Wow, you did it.
Tom Chitty
Did I get it?
Arjun Kharpal
Yeah. Nailed it.
Tom Chitty
Oh, no way.
Arjun Kharpal
Yeah, I identify. Are you googling?
Tom Chitty
No, I genuinely was just reading through the script, thinking.
Arjun Kharpal
13,777 cryptocurrencies in existence. How eager is that?
Tom Chitty
That is. And we only really talked about you know, several of them.
Arjun Kharpal
There’s consignments of coins themed around cats, around dogs, around other pets. There’s obviously you know, the main coins take pleasure in bitcoin. There’s stablecoins. And then there’s a bunch of you know, what people, what you mentioned earlier meme make ups.
Tom Chitty
Memecoins.
Arjun Kharpal
You said meme coins? Well, I thought I heard memecoins. But memecoins. Yeah, memecoins.
Tom Chitty
What are they?
Arjun Kharpal
They’re feel attracted to these sort of jokey coins.
Tom Chitty
That people invest in?
Arjun Kharpal
People invest in them. Favourably, sometimes you’ll see like a meme coin up like 200% in a day or something like that. It’s a thing.
Tom Chitty
Speaking of, you skilled in, price rises. I watched Dumb Money. Have you seen that?
Arjun Kharpal
No. It’s on the list. Yeah. On the bibliography.
Tom Chitty
Yeah. A lot of our CNBC colleagues in the U.S. make an appearance. It’s about the Gamestop short squeeze.
Arjun Kharpal
The meme regulars. They were called meme stocks. That’s why I think you know, we’ve got memecoins.
Tom Chitty
We should do a recommend segment for just you know, tech. Gaming.
Arjun Kharpal
Tech, gaming-related literature, films, culture.
Tom Chitty
Yeah. Urbanity.
Arjun Kharpal
General culture.
Tom Chitty
Highly recommend. Very good. Very good watch. Reminisce over, you can email us at beyondthevalley@cnbc.com. Last week we had, we had the flight from hell story that you gave us which was a material treat. And I thought we’d read a reader email from David Hunt in direct response to that story. David verbalizes, leaving Chicago we encountered a thunderstorm somewhere over Pennsylvania. dark dark skies. Hard rain, lightning. We ascertain the cracks. We see the lightning the plane drops. There’s silence among the passengers. While we hold our breath, a boy maybe age five chortles with delight. I’m on my way to Elmira, New York by way of NYC, New York City where we encounter freezing rain. While delayed on the tarmac, we go to the core several rounds of de-icing before takeoff. We’re flying directly into a snowstorm, were rerouted to Syracuse. The snow is slump so heavily, I prepare for an announced overnight stay. Instead, a small group of us are directed to a passenger van for a white out drive to Elmira, 90 miles away. A yoke of hours later, at about 2 a.m. we arrive at the Elmira airport where it’s also whiteout conditions. I searched for my van parked three ages ago now, clear the snow, while it snows and drive myself home arriving after 3 a.m.
Arjun Kharpal
That’s a verifiable flight from hell that.
Tom Chitty
Poor David. But thank you, thank you so much for sharing that. I take for granted his flight is, you know, longer and more arduous and slightly scarier. Yours was just painful.
Arjun Kharpal
Piercing, just really painful. Yeah, but yeah, we won’t relive that Paris was great was the initial point.
Tom Chitty
If in suspicion, you know, Eurostar’s another option to fly. That’s it for this episode. But before we go, please follow and subscribe to the show. Because of you, Arjun.
Arjun Kharpal
Thank you, Tom.
Tom Chitty
We’ll be back next week for another episode of Beyond the Valley. Goodbye.