Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Bitcoin extends slide below US$ 4,500, new 2018 low

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(London) REUTERS: Bitcoin tumbled as much as 10 percent yesterday to below US$ 4,500, bringing the world’s best-known cryptocurr­ency’s losses to 30 percent within a week as a selloff in digital currencies intensifie­d across the board.

Other cryptocurr­encies also skidded sharply, with Ethereum’s ether losing 10 percent and Ripple’s XRP down 13 percent in a largely sentiment-driven slide.

The latest move lower started this month after a period of relative stability, with prices of bitcoin having hovered around the US$ 6,500 mark for several months.

“The euphoria has died and prices have consolidat­ed with lower lows and lower highs. A lot of people have lost interest,” said Fawad Razaqzada, an analyst at Forex.com.

Yesterday’s falls coincided with broader drops in financial markets. European shares weakened following a big fall on Wall Street.

As well as a general decline in investor confidence in the value of cryptocurr­encies, some traders have also blamed the recent drop on fears that a ‘hard fork’ in bitcoin cash, where the smaller coin that split into two separate currencies, could destabilis­e others.

Bitcoin was trading yesterday at US$ 4,354.20, its lowest level on the Bitstamp exchange since October, 2017.

Bitcoin has now lost about 75 percent of its value since peaking in December.

A regulatory clampdown on cryptocurr­ency trading in early 2018 and a drop in investor interest has sent people scrambling for the exit.

Cryptocurr­ency advocates say price volatility is to be expected, and that the need for virtual currencies which operate outside the mainstream banking system will outlast any short-term price falls.

The second and third largest cryptocurr­encies, XRP and ether, were trading at US$ 0.4451 and US$ 133 respective­ly on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange.

According to industry tracker Coinmarket­cap.com, the total market capitalisa­tion of virtual currencies is now below US$ 150 billion, down from around US$ 800 billion in January.

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