Business Standard

Crypto mania sends Doge soaring ; Robinhood trading app crashes

Dogecoin surges by over 50% while Ether rises almost 45%

- VILDANA HAJRIC AND CLAIRE BALLENTINE

Investors are piling back into some of the fringe corners of the cryptocurr­ency world, with the frenzy sending Dogecoin surging more than 50 per cent again and crashing Robinhood’s trading app.

Other so-called altcoins also took off, with Dash spiking 18 per cent over a 24-hour period through the European morning on Wednesday and Ethereum Classic rising almost 45 per cent. In the world of Defi, tokens such as Force DAO and Tierion surged more than 1,000 per cent on Tuesday, according to Coinmarket­cap.com data. Meanwhile, Robinhood said it resolved earlier issues with crypto trading on its platform.

“You have money looking for a home and this is one of those areas of the market where there is speculatio­n happening, there is significan­t appreciati­on happening in a short period of time,” said Chad Oviatt, director of investment management at Huntington Private Bank. “You get that excitement there.”

The rallies defied easy explanatio­n and continued a trend that’s seen the value of all digital tokens surge past $2.3 trillion. Doge, created as a joke in 2013, has been used in marketing gimmicks — the latest by the Oakland A’s baseball team, which offered two seats to games this week for 100 Dogecoin. The Gemini crypto exchange backed by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss said it now supports Doge, and will soon enable trading of it.

Dogecoin’s red-hot advance from around 0.002 cents a year ago — when it was worth about $300 million — has captured the interest of many on Wall Street. It’s even caught the attention of the Federal Reserve — the central bank’s chairman last week answered “some of the asset prices are high” when asked if things like Gamestop Corp.’s and Dogecoin’s supercharg­ed rallies created threats to financial stability.

As a sign of Dogecoin’s rising popularity, the Robinhood app is among the top 10 downloads at the Apple App Store. Meanwhile, Coinbase Global, the largest US crypto exchange — which doesn’t offer Doge trading — saw its shares fall 4.6 per cent Tuesday, its lowest close since its market debut last month.

“It’s pretty amazing that something that started out as a joke has become so popular,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist for Miller Tabak + Co.

Though interest in digital assets has picked up in recent months as more traditiona­l firms who were long hesitant to the crypto space warm up to cryptocurr­encies, it’s alternativ­e coins that have captured the most attention in recent days. Bitcoin has taken a backseat following record-setting rallies from Ether and Doge, wrote Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda.

“The doge coin bubble should have popped by now, but institutio­nal interest is trying to take advantage of this momentum and that could support another push higher ,” he said in a note. “Doge coin is surging because many cryp to currency traders do not want to miss out on any buzz that stems from Elon Mus k’ s hosting of saturday night live .”

Elsewhere, a new Ether ETF trading in Canada called the CI Galaxy Ethereum ETF (ETHX) broke its record volume on Tuesday. It’s up more than 20 per cent in the first two days of the week.

Bitcoin rose modestly on Wednesday, snapping a three-day losing streak. It was up 0.8 per cent to $55,213 as of 9:29 a.m. in London on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, many — including famed crypto investor Mike Novogratz — have warned that the rallies could be unsustaina­ble. Novogratz, chief executive officer of Galaxy Digital Holdings, said recently he’d be “very, very worried” were one of his friends to invest in Doge.

“It seems that investors are careening from one hot dot to another, like a pinball game,” said Mike Bailey, director of research at FBB Capital Partners. “My sense is this speculativ­e wave will suffer the same fate as the GME and other Robinhood ‘flash-inthe-pan’ stocks. Cryptocurr­encies may have become a new asset class, like precious metals, but surges such as these seem unsustaina­ble.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India