Bitcoin: Bitcoin cracks $10,000 in an hour as crypto sell-off intensifies

MUMBAI: The pre-Christmas risk-off among investors has roiled global markets from equities to cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin became the latest to fall victim to intense bout of selling pressure as the cryptocurrency fell by as much as $10,000 in an hour to close $42,000 earlier on Saturday.

The cryptocurrency has since recovered some of its losses and was last down more than 16 per cent at $47,693.75. Ethereum, the second largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, also saw a similar sell-off as it fell nearly 15 per cent to $3,905.

The crash has been triggered by a risk-off sentiment that has swept global markets in the wake of the emergence of the new COVID-19 variant and the sudden pivot towards hawkishness by the US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.



Powell’s support for a faster tapering of the US Fed’s bond-buying program that will provide less liquidity to the system and tighten financial conditions relatively from the historically loose conditions of the past 21 months is seen as a negative for speculative activity in the market.

“Risk assets like stocks and Bitcoin are tanking simply because Powell hinted the Fed might wrap up the taper a couple of months early and the first 1/4 point rate hike may also come a bit sooner,” Peter Schiff, chief economist and global strategist at Euro Pacific Capital said on Twitter.

The sell-off in the cryptocurrency market was harder for the likes of Cardano, Solana, Polygon, and Shiba Inu, which tanked 13-20 per cent.

Analysts suggested that much of the selling pressure in the Bitcoin market was on the cash side, which was exacerbated by high leveraged positions on Bitcoin derivatives by traders. The instant crash in prices to $42,000 was a result of traders’ stop-loss being triggered on their derivative positions.

“However long term investors should be buying on these long liquidation cascades which are essentially forced and non-organic selling,” said Ishan Arora, partner at Tykhe Block Ventures.

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