Business Standard

Bitcoin bloodbath offers harsh reminder of dot-com crash

- ADAM HAIGH & ERIC LAM BLOOMBERG

Bitcoin’s meteoric rise last year had many observers calling it one of the biggest speculativ­e manias in history. The cryptocurr­ency’s 2018 crash may help cement its place in the bubble record books.

Down 70 per cent from its December high after sliding for a fourth straight day on Friday, Bitcoin is getting evercloser to matching the Nasdaq Composite Index’s 78 per cent peak-totrough plunge after the US dot-com bubble burst. Hundreds of other virtual coins have all but gone to zero — following the same path as Pets.com and other red-hot initial public offerings that flamed out in the early 2000s.

While Bitcoin has bounced back from bigger losses before, it’s far from clear that it can repeat the feat now that much of the world knows about cryptocurr­encies and has made up their mind on whether to invest. Bulls point to the Nasdaq’s eventual recovery and say institutio­nal investors represent a massive pool of potential cryptocurr­ency buyers, but regulatory and security concerns have so far kept most big money managers on the sidelines.

“You’ll have to see the market reverse before you see” institutio­ns pile in, Peter Smith, chief executive officer of Blockchain Ltd., which introduced a crypto trading platform for profession­al investors on Thursday.

Bitcoin declined as much as 4.2 per cent to $5,791 on Friday, the lowest level since November, according to Bloomberg composite prices. It traded at $5,878 as of 10:33 a.m. in New York, down 59 per cent for the year and heading for a second-quarter loss of 14 per cent. Other coins including Ether and Litecoin slumped more, while the combined value of tokens tracked by CoinMarket­Cap.com declined to $236 billion. At the peak of crypto-mania, they were worth about $830 billion.

While it was difficult to find fresh catalysts for Bitcoin’s drop on Friday, hacks at two South Korean exchanges and a regulatory clampdown in Japan have weighed on sentiment in recent weeks. Regulators have stepped up scrutiny of cryptocurr­encies on concern that they’re a breeding ground for illicit activity including money laundering, market manipulati­on and fraud.

Lesser-known tokens have been hit the hardest. Dead Coins lists around 800 that are effectivel­y worth nothing, while Coinopsy puts the tally at more than 1,000. Fewer than 4 per cent of coins with market caps from $50 million to $100 million were successful or promising, according to a March analysis from ICO advisory firm Satis Group.

Bitcoin may not go to zero, but it’s “very much” a bubble, Robert Shiller, the Nobel laureate economist whose warnings about dot-com mania proved prescient, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Tom Keene on Tuesday. Last year’s Bitcoin surge was “not a rational response,” he said.

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