Bitcoin skids amid broad cryptocurrency sell-off
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[February 03, 2018]
By Tommy Wilkes and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Cryptocurrencies
plunged on Friday, with bitcoin at one point sliding below $8,000 and
headed for its biggest weekly loss since December 2013, amid worries
about a regulatory clampdown globally.
The currencies have come off their lows but analysts said the sell-off
was probably not over.
This week's slump brought the total market value of cryptocurrencies
down to around $400 billion, half the high it reached in January,
according to industry tracker Coinmarketcap.com. The market value of
cryptocurrencies is calculated by multiplying the number of digital
coins in existence by their price, although many question whether that
is the right way to value them.
Bitcoin, the biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, fell as much as 15
percent on Friday to a two-month low of $7,625 on the Luxembourg-based
Bitstamp exchange <BTC=BSP>. It clawed back some losses and was down
around 5.6 percent at $8,498 in late New York trading.
The virtual currency is down by close to 25 percent this week and almost
40 percent in 2018. It surged more than 1,000 percent though in 2017.
For some market participants, bitcoin may be down, but it is not likely
to fade.
"Bitcoin has become, and will continue to be, primarily a speculative
asset class," said David Moskowitz, Co-founder and Director of Indorse,
the decentralized social network for professionals.
He added that the recent drops in transaction fees have made it easier
to use bitcoin for payments once again. And if a payment solution can
help the congestion, bitcoin may once again become an effective payment
network, Moskowitz said.
The second and third largest virtual currencies, Ethereum and Ripple,
also plunged more than 20 percent at the session low, Coinmarketcap.com
said. Ethereum was last down 13.2 percent, at $888.22, while Ripple last
traded at 83 U.S. cents, down 14.7 percent.
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A collection of Bitcoin (virtual
currency) tokens are displayed in this picture illustration taken
December 8, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/Illustration/File Photo
Retail investors have poured money into digital coins, enticed by the huge
run-up in prices. Regulators say cryptocurrencies are highly speculative and
dangerous investments.
On Thursday, India vowed to eradicate the use of crypto-assets, joining China
and South Korea in promising to ban parts of the nascent market where prices
have boomed in recent years.
Social media website Facebook <FB.O> said this week it would ban cryptocurrency
advertisements because many were associated with misleading or deceptive
promotional practices. U.S. regulators have sent a subpoena to two of the
world's biggest cryptocurrency players, Bitfinex and Tether
A massive $530 million hack of a Japanese cryptocurrency exchange last week
renewed worries about the security of the industry.
Critics of virtual currencies have called the run-up in prices a speculative
bubble, but supporters of cryptocurrencies say short-term price volatility is to
be expected, and the blockchain technology underpinning these assets maintains
its power and value.
Going back to 2011 and including the current selloff, bitcoin's price has been
halved nine times on the Bitstamp exchange before recovering. The last time was
from November 2014 to January 2015.
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss in New York and Tommy Wilkes in London;
Editing by David Gregorio and Chizu Nomiyama)
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