New York Post

CRYPTO-MIGHT!

‘Bit’ tops $60K as trading crashes Coinbase

- By THOMAS BARRABI With Wires

Bitcoin blew past $60,000 for the first time in more than two years on Wednesday as the popularity of spot ETFs drove a renewed trading frenzy for volatile cryptocurr­encies, and crashed popular crypto exchange Coinbase.

The price of bitcoin soared to nearly $64,000 in the early afternoon, nearing its November 2021 alltime high of $68,789, before falling to just under $60,555 at 5 p.m.

That marked an 18% increase in the leading digital currency compared with one week ago and 40% bump compared with a month ago.

In the midst of Wednesday’s rally, Coinbase, one of the largest digital-asset exchanges, warned users that its website was experienci­ng issues, but assured them that their “assets are safe” after several complained that their digital wallets showed “$0.00.”

“We are dealing with a large surge of traffic — apologies for any issues you encounter,” Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong posted on X.

The bullish run on the world’s most popular crypto token could be the start of what Split Capital’s Zaheer Ebtikar called “a pretty clear FOMO [fear of missing out] kind of rally.”

“More and more people are just convinced to buy,” Ebkitar told Bloomberg.

The massive early success of recently approved spot bitcoin ETFs, which allow investors to acquire stakes in funds that own bitcoin offered by Blackrock, Fidelity and other firms, has played a key role in the surge, experts told The Post. The boom drove $520 million into BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF, a oneday record.

“I do think the fact this is happening concurrent with the ETFs — and you can look at the inflows of those things — that seems to be a pretty big driver for this [rally],” said Colin Harper, head of research at the bitcoin mining software firm Luxor. “There’s a large segment of the population that sees regulatory approval as, ‘Well, the state’s OK with this, they’re not going to ban it, institutio­ns are cleared now’ . . . There’s a lot more legitimacy to it for the average person.”

However, other market experts warned that investors may soon see a “sharp correction” of 20% or more.

“This move has been very sharp, leverage is very high at the moment,” AnB Investment­s’ Jaime Baeza told Bloomberg.

The overall market capitaliza­tion for the cryptocurr­ency market hovered at $2.31 trillion as of Wednesday afternoon, after crossing the $2 trillion threshold earlier this month for the first time in two years.

Cryptocurr­encies have reemerged as a hot asset alongside other trendy bets such as AI chipmaker Nvidia and weight-loss drug maker Eli Lilly, according to Jake Dollarhide, CEO of Longbow Asset Management.

It’s also driven a wave of FOMO activity as retail investors scramble to buy into the trend.

SEC approval

“You have the additional momentum of it being legitimati­zed by the SEC approving the ETFs from Blackrock and others. And then, frankly, the trash was hauled off to the curb in the form of Binance and FTX,” Dollarhide said. “You get rid of some bad actors and you rebuild trust within the crypto space.”

Other bullish factors include investor optimism that the Federal Reserve will cut sky-high interest rates at some point this year as well as a looming bitcoin “halving,” a planned event due in April that reduces the amount of digital currency people receive for “mining” by half.

The latest rally in bitcoin’s price brought it within striking distance of its all-time high of $69,000, a number that seemed unattainab­le over the past two years as a so-called “crypto winter” crushed demand for cryptocurr­encies.

We are dealing with a large surge of traffic — ’ apologies for any issues. — Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong

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