Times of Eswatini

Bitcoin set for record losing streak

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CRYPTOCURR­ENCIES nursed large losses on Friday, with bitcoin pinned below US$30 000 and set for a record losing streak as the collapse of TerraUSD, a so-called stable coin, rippled through markets. Crypto assets have also been swept up in broad selling of risky investment­s on worries of high inflation and rising interest rates. Sentiment is particular­ly fragile, however, as tokens supposed to be pegged to the Dollar have faltered. Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurr­ency by total market value, attempted a bounce early in the Asia session and rose 2 per cent to US$29 500, something of a recovery from a 16-month low of about US$25 400 reached on Thursday.

Rebound

It remains a long way below weekago levels of about US$40 000 and, unless there is a rebound in weekend trade, is headed for a record seventh consecutiv­e weekly loss.

“I don’t think the worst is over,” said Scottie Siu, Investment Director of Axion Global Asset Management, a Hong Kong-based firm that runs a crypto index fund.

“I think there is more downside in the coming days. I think what we need to see is the open interest collapse a lot more, so the speculator­s are really out of it, and that’s when I think the market will stabilise.”

TerraUSD (USDT) broke its 1:1 peg to the Dollar this week, as its mechanism for remaining stable, using another digital token, failed under selling pressure. It last traded below 10 cents.

Tether, the biggest stablecoin and one whose developers say is backed by Dollar assets, has also come under pressure and fell to 95 cents on Thursday, according to CoinMarket­Cap data. Selling has roughly halved the global market value of cryptocurr­encies since November, but the drawdown has turned to panic in recent sessions with the squeeze on stablecoin­s.

These are tokens pegged to the value of traditiona­l assets, often the US Dollar, and are the main medium for moving money between cryptocurr­encies or to convert balances to fiat cash.

Exchanges

“Over half of all bitcoin and ether traded on exchanges are versus a stablecoin, with USDT or Tether taking the largest share,” analysts at Morgan Stanley said in a research note.

“For these types of stablecoin­s, the market needs to trust that the issuer holds sufficient liquid assets they would be able to sell in times of market stress.”

Tether has recovered to parity on the

Dollar and its operating company says it has the necessary assets in Treasuries, cash, corporate bonds and other money-market products.

But it is likely to face further tests if traders keep selling, and analysts are concerned that stress could spill over into money markets if pressure forces more and more liquidatio­n.

Ether, the second-largest cryptocurr­ency by market capitalisa­tion, steadied near US$2 000 on Friday after a drop as low as US$1 700 on Thursday. Bitcoin and ether are about 60 per cent below record peaks reached in November. Crypto-related stocks have also copped a pounding, with shares in broker Coinbase steadying overnight, but still down by half in a little more than a week.

Trading

In Asia, Hong Kong-listed Huobi Technology and BC Technology Group, which operate trading platforms and other crypto services, eyed weekly drops of more than 15 per cent.

Amid the turmoil, Nomura on Friday said it had begun offering bitcoin derivative­s to clients, the latest move by a traditiona­l financial institutio­n into the asset class.

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 ?? (Courtesy pic) ?? Bitcoin and ether are about 60 per cent below record peaks reached in November.
(Courtesy pic) Bitcoin and ether are about 60 per cent below record peaks reached in November.

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