Bitcoin slumps to $10,000, half its peak price, as
regulatory fears grow
Send a link to a friend
[January 17, 2018]
By Tommy Wilkes and Hideyuki Sano
LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Bitcoin skidded a
further 12 percent on Wednesday, marking an almost halving in value from
its peak price, with investors spooked by fears regulators could clamp
down on the volatile cryptocurrency that skyrocketed last year.
The price of bitcoin, the world's biggest and best known cryptocurrency,
fell to as low as $10,0000 on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange,
the lowest since Dec. 1.
Bitcoin touched a peak of almost $20,000 in December - and indeed
crossed over that threshold on some exchanges - but has since been
roiled by several large sell-offs.
Other cryptocurrencies plunged as well. Ethereum and Ripple were both
down heavily after reports South Korea and China could ban
cryptocurrency trading, sparking worries of a wider regulatory
crackdown.
"There is a lot of panic in the market. People are selling to try and
get the hell out of there," said Charles Hayter, founder of
Cryptocompare, which owns cryptocurrencies.
"You have more regulatory uncertainty...and because of these falls you
have these other outfalls," he said, referring to the collapse of some
cryptocurrencies in the recent slump in prices.
With South Korea, Japan and China all making noises about a regulatory
swoop, and officials in France and the United States vowing to
investigate cryptocurrencies, there are concerns that global
coordination on how to regulate them will accelerate.
Officials are expected to debate the rise of bitcoin at the upcoming G20
summit in Argentina in March.
"Cryptocurrencies could be capped in the current quarter ahead of the
G20 meeting in March, where policymakers could discuss tighter
regulations," said Shuhei Fujise, chief analyst at Alt Design.
At its lows on Tuesday, bitcoin suffered its biggest daily decline in
four months. It was a far cry from its peak close to $20,000 in
December, when the virtual currency had risen nearly 2,000 percent over
the year.
Bitcoin has plummeted before. Marc Singer, an adviser at Singer Xenos in
Miami, noted bitcoin fell 93 percent in value over a five-month period
in 2011. The last time bitcoin more than halved in value was from
November 2014 to January 2015.
Tuesday's decline followed reports that South Korea's finance minister
had said banning trading in cryptocurrencies is still an option and that
Seoul plans a set of measures to clamp down on the "irrational"
cryptocurrency investment craze.
[to top of second column] |
Sparks glow from broken Bitcoin (virtual currency) coins in this
illustration picture, December 8, 2017. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
Separately, a senior Chinese central banker said authorities should ban
centralized trading of virtual currencies as well as individuals and businesses
that provide related services.
"Bitcoin is deciding whether this is the moment to crash and burn," said Steven
Englander, head of strategy at New York-based Rafiki Capital.
"My conjecture is that cryptocurrency holders are trying to decide whether to
abandon bitcoin because its limitations mean it will be superseded by better
products or bet that it can thrive despite them."
WILD SWINGS
Cryptocurrencies enjoyed a bumper year in 2017 as mainstream investors entered
the market and as an explosion in so-called initial coin offerings (ICOs) -
digital, token-based fundraising rounds - drove demand.
While many observers say the recent falls show that the bubble has burst, those
backing the nascent markets say that regulation is welcomed and wild price
swings to be expected.
"The volatility of bitcoin - and other crypto currencies - is an expected, and
important, part of the journey to becoming a mature asset class. We expect the
volatility to continue throughout 2018 but fundamentally believe that bitcoin is
still in a bull market," said Christopher Keshian, co-founder of $APEX Token
Fund.
Ethereum, the second largest cryptocurrency by market value, was down 18 percent
since Tuesday, according to website CoinMarketCap.
Ripple, the third biggest, has lost 25 percent of its value over the past 24
hours and was quoted at $1.03, down from a high of $3.81 on Jan 4.
Bitcoin futures maturing on Wednesday on the Cboe Global Markets Inc's Cboe
Futures Exchange were at $10,070, with 1,586 contracts traded, after having
opened at $10,850.
"The run-up in bitcoin created a mystique of one-way trading which is being
shaken, but the pricing requires faith that there will always be demand,"
Englander wrote.
"This is far from guaranteed given the existence of alternatives with better
characteristics."
(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes in London and Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; writing by
Vidya Ranganathan and Tommy Wilkes; editing by Mark Heinrich)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |