National Post (National Edition)
Bitcoin tumbles after ‘fraud’ remark
THE CURRENCY HAS HAD A REMARKABLE RUN.
LONDON • Bitcoin slid by more than 10 per cent Wednesday as investors sold the cryptocurrency after a warning by JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon that it “is a fraud” and will eventually “blow up.”
Bitcoin, the original and still the biggest cryptocurrency, has been on a tear in recent months, hitting a record high just below $5,000 (all figures US) at the start of September after a more than fivefold increase in price since the start of the year.
But bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have been falling since early last week, when China banned the issuance of new digital coins for fundraising purposes — a phenomenon known as initial coin offerings (ICO).
ICOs have fuelled a rapid ascent in the value of cryptocurrencies from about $17 billion at the start of the year — with bitcoin making up around 90 per cent of that — to a record-high close to $180 billion at the beginning of September, of which bitcoin represented less than half.
Following the ICO ban, the market was further spooked by reports early this week that Chinese authorities were planning to forbid any trading of cryptocurrencies and by a warning on ICOs from Britain’s financial watchdog, raising fears of a wider crackdown.
Dimon’s warning triggered a further 11 per cent collapse in the price of bitcoin, which had already lost around 15 per cent of its value in 10 days.
The cryptocurrency tumbled to as low as $3,720.01 on the Bitstamp exchange before recovering to trade around $3,810 by late afternoon Wednesday, still down 8.7 per cent on the day.
Most other digital currencies were down also with bitcoin’s main rival ether — often called Ethereum, the name given to the project behind the currency — down 10 per cent on the day, according to Coinmarketcap, an industry website.
Dimon told an investor conference in New York that if any of his traders were found trading bitcoin he would “fire them in a second” and bitcoin was “worse than tulip bulbs,” referring to a famous market bubble from the 1600s.
“This is not the first time that Jamie Dimon has spoken against the currency — the last time he had a similar go on the currency was in November 2015,” said ThinkMarkets analyst Naeem Aslam. “Since then, the currency has had a remarkable run.”
“Most importantly, given that the CEO does not think that shorting this trade would yield a more favourable outcome shows that the cryptocurrency has a lot more room to run.”