3 reasons cryptocurrency prices are still tumbling
Bitcoin's value continued its dramatic slide on Monday after falling losing nearly 9% on Thursday and Friday amid a broader sell-off in financial markets.
The cryptocurrency traded Monday morning at around $32,800 and is down 21% over the last month, according to Coindesk. Bitcoin is now at its lowest price since July 2021, Reuters reported. Other major digital currencies, including ether, have also pulled back sharply in value. Ether traded at about $2,360 Monday morning, its lowest price since February.
Here's what experts say is weighing on cryptos.
Raging volatility
The Federal Reserve raised interest rates half a percentage point earlier last week and Wall Street responded with huge gains in the stock market. One day later, investors reversed course and sent markets into a nosedive — and took crypto prices down with it.
"Cryptos have been tending to trend recently with the stock market," said Michael Oliver, chief analyst at Momentum Structural Analysis.
Bitcoin is mirroring the Nasdaq, said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda. The tech-centric index is down 21% this year, while bitcoin is down 22%, he noted.
Many investors piled into bitcoin last year when it was priced between $32,000 and $36,000. A further drop to around $30,000 could trigger more selling, Moya said.
"Bitcoin is really stuck in a sideways news cycle where you're just waiting for it to be calm on Wall Street and then you'll see more people confident in investing," he said. "I still think there's a lot of long-term potential value here, but you have to be able to stomach this volatility."
Mainstream adoption lagging
Numerous events last year underscored the growing importance of crypto in financial services. More retail investors bought in using Cash App or Robinhood; a growing number of businesses accepted bitcoin as payment for goods and services; and El Salvador adopted it as legal tender.
This year has been quieter so far, with fewer milestones to chart crypto's progress as an investment and medium of exchange.
"There's a belief that mainstream adoption [of bitcoin] is taking a lot longer than people expected," Moya said. "Right now, what we're seeing is that the crypto market is in a wait-and-see mode."
Among other things, investors are watching to see what role crypto plays in the emerging metaverse and what rules a special Biden administration task force may put in place to regulate digital currency.
Investors seeking safer ground
Chris Kline, co-founder of Bitcoin IRA, said much of the recent fade in crypto prices simply stems from investors reacting to what's happening in the broader economy.
When the stock market stumbles, many investors move their money into less risky, more stable assets, such as U.S. Treasury bonds. Some bitcoin investors are weighing other investing options and "moving their money back to the dollar, as a starting point, and then seeing what they're going to do from there," Kline said.
Bitcoin peaked at a price of $69,000 last November. Analysts have said that bitcoin could fall as low as $30,000 or $25,000 in coming weeks before climbing back up later this year.