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Buy the rumor; sell the news. You’ve probably heard that old saying before, and maybe you’ve fallen victim to a sell-off that typically occurs after a rumor-based hype phase passes. Today, a similar event occurred with Marathon Digital Holdings (NASDAQ:MARA) stock. In hindsight, it feels like stock traders should have seen this coming. This may just be the beginning of a much deeper drawdown, so I am bearish on MARA stock.
I’m actually bullish on crypto and Bitcoin (BTC-USD) for the long term. Bitcoin hasn’t even reached its all-time high yet, so there may be more room to run in the next year or two.
This doesn’t mean you have to buy every Bitcoin mining stock right now. As we’ll discover, Marathon Digital Holdings is a highly-active cryptocurrency miner, so that’s part of the bullish argument for MARA stock. Nevertheless, after an eyebrow-raising hype phase in crypto-related assets, it’s time for stock traders to take a sobering look at Marathon Digital.
Marathon Digital and the Crypto Event of the Year
If a rising tide lifts all boats, then 2023’s rising tide of crypto hype definitely lifted Marathon Digital Holdings stock. If you can believe it, MARA stock catapulted from $4 to $24 dollars last year.
This share price performance certainly wasn’t based on Marathon Digital’s earnings growth. In fact, the company is unprofitable and doesn’t have a good track record of quarterly EPS beats.
Could MARA stock’s stunning rally be due to Marathon Digital’s aggressive Bitcoin mining pace? I’ll admit that the company has kept up a fast production pace, having mined 12,852 Bitcoins last year. Furthermore, Marathon Digital Holdings CEO Fred Thiel expects the company to “target 30% growth in energized hash rate in 2024” and “reach 50 exahashes in the next 18 to 24 months.”
That’s ambitious, but it hardly justifies last year’s moonshot in MARA stock. The reality of the situation is that Bitcoin’s rising tide lifted all crypto-stock boats in 2023 as the media chatter got louder about an anticipated spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF).
It’s no exaggeration to call this the biggest cryptocurrency market event of the year and maybe even the decade. For years, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) refused to approve any applications for a spot Bitcoin ETF. A couple of days ago, there was a hack and a false alarm, but the SEC still hadn’t approved a Bitcoin ETF.
Finally, the SEC announced yesterday that it had approved the launch of 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs. It’s a big deal because now, a slew of pension plans, retirement accounts, and institutional funds can more easily (albeit indirectly) invest money in Bitcoin.