Bitcoin’s Price Falls Below $20,000
The
cryptocurrency has lost 72% of its value from its record high in November
The price of bitcoin lurched below $20,000, and below a
level widely monitored by cryptocurrency enthusiasts, as a brutal selloff in
crypto showed no signs of abating.
Bitcoin fell as low as $18,739.50 and stayed below
$20,000 on Saturday, according to CoinDesk, losing
72% of its value from its high in November. Concerns about the Federal
Reserve’s actions to tame higher-than-expected inflation have pushed both
stocks and cryptocurrencies into a bear market. Big names in the industry,
including Coinbase Global Inc., the biggest cryptocurrency exchange in the U.S., have recently announced job cuts.
There is no specific significance to the $20,000 level,
but the price slid below $19,783, a previous high water mark hit in 2017,
according to Coinbase. Bitcoin bulls have long held
that the cryptocurrency had in recent years entered a new stage of development
and acceptance, and that it wouldn’t fall below that 2017 level.
“It will be a lot of pain for a lot of investors,” said Yuya Hasegawa, a market analyst at Japanese crypto exchange
Bitbank Inc. People will lose confidence in the
crypto market as a whole, but seasoned crypto investors and those who believe
in its long-term prospects will see an opportunity to buy at discounted prices,
he said.
Ether, another major cryptocurrency, fell below $1,000,
briefly reaching $975.35 on Saturday, according to CoinDesk,
its lowest level since January 2021.
Bitcoin’s slide from its record high of $67,802 in
November has contributed to a roughly $2 trillion wipeout in the broader
market. Crypto’s total market capitalization, which
peaked in November at nearly $3 trillion, stood at around $840 billion
Saturday—its lowest since January 2021, according to
data provider CoinMarketCap.
Bitcoin traded around the $30,000 mark for most of May
before dropping sharply again in June after a fresh inflation shock and worries
about rising U.S. interest rates. Investors have been unloading assets seen as
risky, such as cryptocurrencies and technology stocks.
Individual investors have received margin calls, with
about $260 million of collateral pledged by about 80,000 retail traders
liquidated over the past 24 hours, according to data provider CoinGlass. That compares with $1 billion earlier this week.
A growing number of previously highflying crypto firms
have been feeling the pain in what has been dubbed a “crypto winter.”
Cryptocurrency lender Babel Finance told customers Friday that it was suspending redemptions and withdrawals from all
products, citing “unusual liquidity
pressures.” One of the largest crypto lenders, Celsius Network LLC, hasn’t let users withdraw funds for roughly a week, citing extreme market conditions.
Cryptocurrency-focused hedge fund Three Arrows Capital
Ltd. has hired legal and financial advisers to help work out a solution for its investors and
lenders after suffering heavy losses from a broad market selloff in digital
assets, the firm’s founders told The Wall Street Journal.
The surge in cryptocurrency valuations over the last two
years was aided by big-name investments from companies such as Tesla Inc. and a period of lower interest rates during the
pandemic that encouraged individuals stuck at home to buy riskier assets in the
hopes of greater returns.
Interest-rate increases now being enacted by the Fed come
at a time when blowups in some crypto projects have rippled across the
ecosystem. So-called stablecoin TerraUSD
broke from its $1 peg last month following intense selling pressure, leaving it
and its original sister cryptocurrency Luna now nearly worthless. As its developers sought to defend TerraUSD’s
peg, they sold bitcoin reserves, weighing on the price of it and other assets.
Crypto investors more recently have become concerned
about a derivative of the cryptocurrency ether that is locked up until the Ethereum network transitions to a less energy-intensive
model. So-called Lido-staked ether has been trading at a discount to ether
itself recently.
“Crypto has enough problems. It doesn’t need the macro,”
said Noelle Acheson, head of market insights at crypto lender Genesis Global
Trading, in reference to rising interest rates and inflation concerns.