No letup for bitcoin as biggest cryptocurrency extends collapse
Bitcoin extended losses, bringing its four-session slide to as much as 20%, as questions mount about whether the world鈥檚 biggest cryptocurrency was manipulated during last year鈥檚 record price surge.
After rallying more than 1,400% in 2017 amid an investor frenzy for digital assets, Bitcoin is down almost 70% to around $6,325 as of 2:52 p.m. in New York, from its record high of $19,511 set in December. It traded at a few cents after being launched in 2009.
鈥淭hings have changed for Bitcoin and the crypto space,鈥 said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at online trading firm Oanda Corp. in London. 鈥淭here doesn鈥檛 seem to be as much hype, or positive news. Every time we get a negative news story now — after a period of consolidation — we don鈥檛 see bullish sentiment come in to support it. It鈥檚 almost as if people are waiting to sell it.麓麓
The virtual currency has struggled to reverse a selloff that coincides with negative news, most recently a study of possible price manipulation using the Tether coin. Bloomberg News reported in May that the Justice Department opened up a criminal probe into illegal trading practices that can manipulate the price of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
Tether, one of the most-traded cryptocurrencies, shows a pattern of being spent on Bitcoin at pivotal moments, helping to drive the world鈥檚 first digital asset to a record price in December, according to research by a University of Texas professor known for flagging suspicious activity in the VIX benchmark.
Questions about Tether and Bitfinex have dogged the cryptocurrency world since last year when Bitfinex lost banking relationships yet continued to operate. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission subpoenaed both firms in December, seeking proof that Tether is backed by a reserve of U.S. dollars, as it claims. Tether and Bitfinex haven鈥檛 been accused of wrongdoing.
The digital coin has closed below its 50-, 100- and 200-day moving averages for the past 16 days, the longest stretch below those support levels this year.
In other technical measures, Bitcoin鈥檚 relative-strength index has fallen below 30, a level often used in equities and some other asset classes as indicating oversold. It typically rises, snapping back above 30, in a matter of days, according to a five-year analysis.Many of Bitcoin鈥檚 closest peers have also tumbled. Ethereum, the No. 2 coin by market value, and No. 3 Ripple have both dropped about 20% this week.
鈥淭he entire crypto space seems to be taking the hit now,鈥 Erlam said. 鈥淔or Bitcoin, $6,000 seems to be a support level now. If I鈥檓 bearish, I鈥檓 desperate to see it break below $6,000.鈥 — Bloomberg


