Bitcoin rebounds from dip below RM39,600 in white-knuckle ride

The gyrations took the digital token across a trading range of more than RM10,296 over 18 hours

by BLOOMBERG

NEW YORKBitcoin’s wild start to 2018 turned breakneck on Wednesday, with the largest cryptocurrency plunging below US$10,000 (RM39,600) for the first time in six weeks before staging a rally to trade virtually unchanged.

The gyrations took the digital token across a trading range of more than US$2,600 over 18 hours. Its tumble to a low of US$9,186 pushed a month-long rout past 50% and raised the spectre that last year’s 1,400% rally was giving way to what many considered an inevitable bursting of the bubble.

Bitcoin rebounded US$1,600 in the next four hours to trade at US$10,780 as of 3:44pm in New York yesterday, according to consolidated pricing data collated by Bloomberg.

The drama on Wednesday was sparked by increased scrutiny from regulators around the world that spread across the digital-coin realm in recent days, wiping out more than US$300 billion in value just since Jan 13. Bitcoin’s losses reached US$140 billion from its record of US$19,511 on Dec 18. It’s still higher by 1,000% in the past year. Bitcoin was overbought and sentiment was ecstatic,” said Ari Paul, CIO of BlockTower Capital Advisors. “This is an overdue correction triggered by South Korean regulation fears.”

In South Korea, a hotbed of trading, regulators warned they may shut down cryptocurrency exchanges completely after limiting their operations. China is said to have intensified its curbs on trading of the digital coins, extending restrictions to over-the-counter and peer-to-peer platforms after banning exchanges last year. In the US, the Securities and Exchange Commission asked at least 15 funds to pull applications this month for bitcoin-related exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

That’s left speculators across the globe struggling to determine when or how market watchdogs may rein in an industry that is decentralised and derives much of its value from anonymous ownership.

“We get sell-offs like this fairly regularly. I think this one is more pronounced and press-worthy since it is affecting more people and the dollars at stake are greater,” said Joe Van Hecke, managing partner at Chicago-based Grace Hall Trading LLC. “It’s a great time to evaluate which of these coins have staying power, actually have utility going forward, and invest in those.”

Souring the mood in the market, cryptocurrency exchange Bitconnect said it’s shutting down after receiving two cease-and-desist letters from state authorities for the unauthorised sale of securities and suffering from denial-of-service attacks, while one of the biggest trading platforms, Kraken, was offline for over a day last week as a scheduled update went awry.

In addition, some are blaming part of the rout on the Lunar New Year, as Asian traders cash out their cryptocurrencies to travel and buy gifts for the holiday that starts on Feb 16 this year.

The sell-off has been amid relatively high trading volume, with around 400,000 bitcoin exchanging hands on Jan 15, the highest since Dec 21, according to the latest data on Bitcoinity.org.

It wasn’t supposed to happen that way. When bitcoin futures started trading last month on CME Group Inc.and Cboe Global Markets Inc exchanges, it triggered speculation that there would soon be a range of crypto ETF and mutual fund offerings. That in turn would draw hordes of new investors and lift bitcoin even higher.

Many assertions that digital coins represent a bubble have triggered double-digit sell-offs over the past year, often to be followed by rebounds. It fell 26% in a week after reaching its peak in mid-December, only to rally 21% in the next 10 days. Since then, its posted only two gains in eight sessions.

Bitcoin’s market value has dropped to about US$170 billion from a peak north of US$310 billion. The December surge began after the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission agreed to allow trading in bitcoin futures. The digital coin is still higher by almost 1,000% from a year ago.

“There are a great many investors that are excited to see Bitcoin below US$10,000 as a second opportunity to enter at a price they feared they’d never see again,” BlockTower’s Paul said. — Bloomberg