18 Predictions for 2018

2017 turned out to be a pretty banner year for investors and America as a whole. The U.S. stock market indexes all hit dozens of new all-time highs, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) setting a record for the most record closes hit in a single year. It's safe the say the memories of the Great Recession have been put to bed for good.

The U.S. economy hummed along, despite the Federal Reserve increasing interest rates on three separate occasions. GDP growth in the third quarter came in at a very healthy 3.2% ahead of the holiday season, and the U.S. unemployment rate of 4.1% as of Nov. 2017 is the lowest it's been since December of 2000.

A man in a suit with his hands around a crystal ball.
A man in a suit with his hands around a crystal ball.

Image source: Getty Images.

18 predictions for 2018

But as we prepare to dive headfirst into 2018, there are plenty of questions on everyone's mind. Most of these revolve around what we as investors should expect next. While I don't have a crystal ball (I'd be retired by now if I had a functional one), and am not in any way guaranteeing that the following will come true, here are 18 predictions that I suspect have a decent chance of coming true for the upcoming year.

1. Bitcoin will lose at least half of its value, twice

Following a blistering run higher, bitcoin's volatility only seems to be growing, not slowing, despite the addition of bitcoin futures trading in December 2017 and the expectation of bitcoin ETFs becoming available in 2018. Since April 2013, bitcoin has plunged by 22% on 20 separate occasions, with three of those instances matching or topping a 50% decline. Given how retail investors (and their emotions) are still in control of bitcoin, wild volatility should be expected. Don't be surprised if bitcoin plunges by 50% or more twice next year.

2. Russia will ban bitcoin

Vladimir Putin seems to be all but a lock to win a 2018 presidential election in Russia. But this isn't the biggest story you can expect from Russia in the upcoming year. My belief is that Putin will put his foot down on bitcoin and ban the popular cryptocurrency. In October, Putin was quoted as saying bitcoin creates "opportunities to launder funds acquired through criminal activities, tax evasion, even terrorism financing, as well as the spread of fraud schemes." Russia's central bank concurred, too. The list of countries where bitcoin is banned should grow in 2018.

A physical gold bitcoin on a table.
A physical gold bitcoin on a table.

Image source: Getty Images.

3. Bitcoin will (briefly) lose its spot at the head of the cryptocurrency table

Until recently, bitcoin made up between 60% and 80% of the aggregate market cap of all cryptocurrencies combined. But the fourth quarter saw other virtual coins rally in a big way and handily outperform bitcoin. It's my suspicion that while bitcoin will begin and end the year as the world's largest cryptocurrency by market cap, it'll lose that title, at least briefly, in 2018. To what cryptocurrency, you ask? My guess would be either Ripple, which has been snagging blockchain partnerships with big financial institutions, or Ethereum, which has 200 organizations around the world testing a version of its blockchain.