The Star Late Edition

Bitcoin touches new low at $6 000

- Eric Lam and Yuji Nakamura

BITCOIN touched below $6 000 (R85 000) and dozens of smaller digital tokens retreated as this month’s sell-off in cryptocurr­encies showed few signs of letting up.

The largest digital currency fell as much as 6.2 percent to $5 887, the lowest level since June, before paring some of the drop, according to Bloomberg composite pricing. Ether sank as much as 13 percent, while all but one of the 100 biggest cryptocurr­encies tracked by Coinmarket­cap.com recorded declines over the past 24 hours.

The total market capitalisa­tion of virtual currencies dropped to $193 billion. That’s down from a peak of about $835bn in January.

“Most cryptocurr­encies have been overvalued for a very long time,” said Samson Mow, chief strategy officer at blockchain developer Blockstrea­m.

“It’s hard to pin this move on any particular factor, but it feels like the opposite of last year when money piled in as people felt FOMO. Now it’s piling out as they sense panic.”

While cryptocurr­encies rallied in July on hopes that a Bitcoin-backed exchange-traded fund would attract new investors, US regulators have yet to sign off on multiple proposals for such a product.

The letdown has coincided with growing concern that entreprene­urs who raised crypto-denominate­d funds via initial coin offerings are now cashing out of holdings such as Ether, the token for the Ethereum blockchain that is a popular platform for crypto projects.

“The big story in the market today is the huge weakness in Ethereum,” Timothy Tam, chief executive officer of CoinFi, a cryptocurr­ency data analysis company, said in a phone interview. “Bitcoin has held up relatively well versus Ethereum. It’s still quite weak versus the US dollar.”

At the height of Ether’s rally last year, the digital coin comprised 32 percent of cryptocurr­ency market capitalisa­tion. – Bloomberg

 ??  ?? The total market capitalisa­tion of virtual currencies dropped to $193 billion, from a peak of about $835bn in January.
The total market capitalisa­tion of virtual currencies dropped to $193 billion, from a peak of about $835bn in January.

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