Houston Chronicle

The great cryptocurr­ency crash of 2018 is heading for its worst week yet.

- By Eric Lam

The great cryptocurr­ency crash of 2018 is heading for its worst week yet.

Bitcoin slipped closer to $4,000 and most of its peers tumbled on Friday, extending the Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index’s decline since Nov. 16 to 24 percent. That’s the worst weekly slump since crypto-mania peaked in early January.

After an epic rally last year that exceeded many of history’s most notorious bubbles, cryptocurr­encies have become mired in a nearly $700 billion rout that shows few signs of abating. Many of the concerns that sparked the 2018 retreat -- including increased regulatory scrutiny, community infighting and exchange snafus -- have only intensifie­d this week. Even after losses exceeding 70 percent for most virtual currencies, Oanda Corp.’s Stephen Innes has yet to see strong evidence of a capitulati­on that would signal a market bottom.

“There’s still a lot of people in this game,” Innes, head of trading for Asia Pacific at Oanda, said by phone from Singapore. If Bitcoin “collapses, if we start to see a run down toward $3,000, this thing is going to be a monster. People will be running for the exits.”

Innes said his base-case forecast is for Bitcoin to trade between $3,500 and $6,500 in the short term, with the potential to fall to $2,500 by January.

The largest cryptocurr­ency fell 3.6 percent to $4,270 on Friday, heading for its 11th decline in 12 weekday sessions, according to Bloomberg composite pricing. Bitcoin hasn’t closed below $4,000 for almost 14 months. Rivals Ether, XRP and Litecoin fell between 4.4 percent and 6.6 percent. The market value of all cryptocurr­encies tracked by CoinMarket­Cap.com has sunk to $140 billion, down from about $835 billion at the market peak in January.

The rout’s biggest casualties: individual investors who piled in just as prices peaked, and companies like Nvidia Corp. that supplied the crypto ecosystem. The California-based chipmaker has lost nearly half its value since the start of October as demand for its cryptocurr­ency mining chips collapsed and results in its gaming division disappoint­ed.

The economic impact of the crypto collapse has so far been limited, in part because most major banks and institutio­nal money managers have little to no exposure to virtual currencies. For most investors, recent declines in equity markets have arguably been far more important: the $700 billion slump in digital assets since January compares with $1.3 trillion lost from the market value of global shares just this week.

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