The latest moves in crypto markets, in context By Jamie Crawley, CoinDesk reporter Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up here. |
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It's Little Friday! Here's what you need to know today in crypto: | - Bitcoin rose above $29K, with some analysts hinting at a 20% rally in the cards.
- SEC scraps proposed definition of digital assets.
- WallStreetBets token plummets 90% on insider sell-off.
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CoinDesk Market Index (CMI): 1,284 +2.2% Bitcoin (BTC): $29,207 +2.0% Ether (ETC): $1,910 +2.3% S&P 500 futures: 4,092.00 −0.4% FTSE 100: 7,726.77 −0.8% Treasury Yield 10 Years: 3.4% −0.0
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Bitcoin has pushed above $29,000 following the U.S. Federal Reserve's 25 basis point interest rate hike on Thursday, with some analysts speculating on a strong break to the upside after over a month of trade in a narrow wedge. The move over $29,000 came a few hours after the Fed hike as a report indicated another U.S. bank failure could soon be at hand. Crypto services provider Matrixport has said that if Thursday's rate rise proves to be the last of this cycle, bitcoin could rally 20% to $36,000. Despite trading volumes declining slightly, the "path higher sees only limited resistance," Matrixport said in a research note on Thursday. The end of the recent earning season will see stock buybacks restart, which will "continue to be a tailwind for stocks and risk assets," the note added. |
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) decided not to include a definition of digital assets in its latest hedge fund ruling, in what could have been a sign of positive intent toward clearer regulation of the crypto sector. The SEC had included the definition of assets that "use distributed ledger or blockchain technology," in its 2022 proposal to overhaul mandatory disclosures for hedge funds, but has now pulled that wording. The agency said it is "continuing to consider this term and [is] not adopting 'digital assets' as part of this rule at this time." Anne-Marie Kelley, a former SEC official and now a partner at Mercury Strategies, suggested the commission may have deleted it as "any recognition of digital assets' uniqueness weakens their litigation stance that digital assets are securities." The WallStreetBets token (WSB), which is linked to the WallStreetBets subreddit, dropped 90% in the last 24 hours following a big run higher that had seen its market cap jump to $50 million in under three days. The plunge came after one of the insiders connected to the project, @zjzWSB, dumped a large amount of tokens in return for 334 ETH ($635,000). Blockchain sleuth @ZachXBT flagged the transactions on Twitter, which seemed to trigger the mass selling, bringing about the 90% crash. Users had previously received an airdrop of nearly seven ether worth of WSB tokens for simply pasting their crypto wallet addresses on Twitter. This helped the tokens go viral on Crypto Twitter, forming part of the ongoing memecoin frenzy, which has also spawned the likes of PEPE. |
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Market Insight: Bitcoin Awaits Wednesday's Fed Decision
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Bitcoin's dominance of the cryptocurrency market has risen from 42% to 49% since the U.S. banking sector hit choppy waters in early March. The dominance rate, which measures BTC's performance relative to the broader market, is now at a 22-month high, according to data tracked by TradingView.
Some analysts have observed that bitcoin's strong performance in conjunction with the slide in banking stocks is evidence of crypto's strengthening appeal as a hedge against weakness of the dollar, similar to gold or oil.
"You see outperformance of BTC within the crypto market when regional bank share prices collapse. This signals that BTC is the high-quality anti-dollar liquid play for investors as the crisis unfolds further," Decentral Park Capital's Portfolio Manager Lewis Harland told CoinDesk.
Bitcoin dominance has oscillated in a range of 37.5% to its recent high of 48.9% over the last two years. Breaking above 50% would "likely signal a new market regime of prolonged BTC outperformance within the market," according to Harland. |
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- The chart shows U.S. recession probability based on the Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell's preferred indicator, the so-called near-term forward spread – which tracks the difference between expected yields on three-month Treasury bills in 18 months and the current three-month yield.
- The probability has surged to 94%, the highest ever, surpassing the peaks seen ahead of the coronavirus-induced crash, the sub-prime crisis and the dot-com bubble.
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Disclaimer: The information presented in this message is intended as a news item that provides a brief summary of various events and developments that affect, or that might in the future affect, the value of one or more of the cryptocurrencies described above. The information contained in this message, and any information liked through the items contained herein, is not intended to provide sufficient information to form the basis for an investment decision. The information presented herein is accurate only as of its date, and it was not prepared by a research analyst or other investment professional. You should seek additional information regarding the merits and risks of investing in any cryptocurrency before deciding to purchase or sell any such instruments. |
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