Bitcoin Retraces 3 Weeks of Gains as Analysts Blame Macroeconomic Turmoil

Bitcoin is holding at around $21,340 after slumping for the sixth consecutive day.

AccessTimeIconAug 19, 2022 at 6:37 p.m. UTC
Updated May 11, 2023 at 6:04 p.m. UTC
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Bitcoin continued its six-day losing streak with the biggest plunge in two months. (TradingView)
Bitcoin continued its six-day losing streak with the biggest plunge in two months. (TradingView)

Bitcoin (BTC) erased three weeks of gains after plunging 8.4%, its biggest single-digit decline in two months.

The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization is now trading at about $21,340.

Two analysts with whom CoinDesk spoke said investor concerns about inflation and the likelihood of continued monetary hawkishness by the U.S. Federal Reserve had spurred the decline in crypto prices and other riskier assets. The tech-heavy Nasdaq index, whose fluctuations have largely correlated with bitcoin this year, recently fell over 2%. The S&P 500, which has a strong tech component, was down about 1.2%.

Paul McCaffery, co-head of equities for investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, noted the connection between plunging asset prices and Wednesday’s release of minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) July meeting showing the U.S. Federal Reserve continues to be concerned about inflation and might not slow the pace of interest rate hikes soon. Bitcoin’s price rose last week after an encouraging Consumer Price Index (CPI) suggested the Fed could ratchet back its approach because of easing inflation.

McCaffery said crypto performance will depend on macroeconomic conditions and the ongoing development of regulation.

“The reality is that for now the space is highly correlated to risk assets, so price action will follow the macro narrative for the most part, with the additional factor of global regulatory action weighing on the sector,” McCaffery wrote in an email.

Sylvia Jablonski, Defiance ETFs co-founder, CEO and chief investment officer, also highlighted voting and non-voting Fed members’ vocal unease with inflation, which remains at near four-decade highs despite the recent improvement shown by the CPI.

“Crypto is now on that list of thoughtful, innovative, disruptive technologies and it's viewed as sort of high risk by the average retail trader,” Jablonski said. “So what happens is they get this bad news, they sort of take it in and, lo and behold, the price of bitcoin falls.”

Ether (ETH), the second-largest crypto by market value, had risen sharply over the past month on enthusiasm about the expected September Ethereum protocol change known as the Merge. However, even ether recently fell to around $1,700, down 9.1% over the past 24 hours.

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Jimmy is a CoinDesk markets reporter.


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