Windsor Star

Bitcoin craters along with other digital coins

- ERIC LAM AND TODD WHITE

Bitcoin plunged on Thursday in a sell-off that saw other digital assets fall more than 20 per cent, a slide likely to stoke speculatio­n about the durability of the latest boom in cryptocurr­encies.

The largest token fell as much as 14 per cent in Thursday trading, heading for one of its worst days since the pandemic-spurred liquidatio­n in March.

The rout began just hours after Bitcoin rose to within US$7 of its record high of US$19,511, the culminatio­n of a more-than250-per-cent surge in past nine months. Fears over tighter crypto regulation and profit-taking after a frenetic rally were among the reasons cited for the sudden drop.

The sell-off gathered pace late Wednesday after Coinbase Inc. chief executive officer Brian Armstrong tweeted about speculatio­n the U.S. is considerin­g new rules that would undermine anonymity in digital transactio­ns.

“News that the Trump administra­tion may clamp down on crypto might have been a trigger for the drop,” said Antoni Trenchev, managing partner of Nexo in London, which bills itself as the world's biggest digital-coin lender. “But any asset that rallies 75 per cent in two months and 260 per cent from the March lows is allowed to undergo a correction.”

Other coins including XRP tumbled as much as 27 per cent, according to prices compiled by Bloomberg.

After garnering more support from Wall Street money managers and fund providers, the rally in cryptocurr­encies had looked overheated. The fierce retreat could stir yet another debate over their value in diversifyi­ng portfolios.

“Conditions are very massively overbought and bound for a correction,” said Vijay Ayyar, head of business developmen­t with crypto exchange Luno in Singapore. “So I don't think it's unusual.”

Crypto believers tout purchases by retail investors, institutio­ns and even billionair­es, as well as the search for a hedge against dollar weakness amid the pandemic, as reasons why the boom can last.

Skeptics argue the cryptocurr­ency's famed volatility portends a repeat of what happened three years ago, when a bubble burst spectacula­rly. Some see signs of retail investors piling in to chase momentum for fast gains, storing up an inevitable reckoning.

Concern about potential U.S. crypto rules help explain Thursday's price drop across most major digital assets, said Ryan Rabaglia, global head of trading at OSL brokerage in Hong Kong.

“It's also not unusual to see a short-term pullback following periods of significan­t, accelerate­d gains as traders look to take profits before resetting once volatility subsides,” he said. “Once the dust settles, we're back to business as usual with all medium to longterm bullish indicators still in play.”

Proponents of digital assets say the current focus on cryptocurr­encies compared with three years ago is different because of growing institutio­nal interest, for instance from the likes of Fidelity Investment­s and Jpmorgan Chase & Co.

Just this week, Van Eck Associates Corp. launched a Bitcoin exchange-traded note on the Deutsche Boerse Xetra exchange. In October, Paypal Holdings Inc. said it would allow its customers access to cryptocurr­encies.

There is also a buzz around Ethereum, the most-actively used blockchain in the world, which is set for a network upgrade that would allow it to process a similar number of transactio­ns as Mastercard Inc. and Visa Inc.

The shift to the new system could curb the total supply of Ether, whose price has quadrupled so far this year.

Luno's Ayyar said he expects Bitcoin to stabilize and achieve all-time highs. But that would be followed by a larger drop in the cryptocurr­ency, he said.

Soravis Srinawakoo­n, chief executive of Bangkok-based Band Protocol, said the plunge in crypto was healthy.

“This is just a normal pullback after seven weeks straight of Bitcoin in the green, due to many people over-leveraging.”

 ?? DADO RUVIC/ REUTERS ?? Bitcoin fell as much as 14 per cent Thursday.
DADO RUVIC/ REUTERS Bitcoin fell as much as 14 per cent Thursday.

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