CEO Morning Brief

Bitcoin Slides on Biden Drama, Risk of Sales by German Govt

edgeinvest
Publish date: Fri, 05 Jul 2024, 09:58 PM
TheEdge CEO Morning Brief

(July 4): A third-straight daily slide in bitcoin took the digital asset close to levels last seen in February amid challenges including US political drama and signs that tokens seized by the German government were moved to exchanges.

The largest cryptocurrency fell as much as 4.3% on Thursday before paring some of the drop to trade 3% lower at US$57,680 as of 10:38am in London. Smaller tokens such as solana and meme-crowd favourite dogecoin also sank.

Investors across global markets are gaming out scenarios in case 81-year-old President Joe Biden succumbs to calls to scrap his US re-election bid. One possibility is that a stronger Democratic contender emerges to make life tougher for Republican Donald Trump, whose agenda favours the crypto industry.

“The likelihood of a stronger Democratic candidate replacing Biden who might not be pro-crypto is a factor,” said Richard Galvin, co-founder of hedge fund Digital Asset Capital Management. “A bigger reason in the short term for the Bitcoin weakness is the overhang from Mt Gox, and government selling.”

Traders in recent days have been weighing the risk of disposals by the US and German governments of seized bitcoin. Data from Arkham Intelligence indicates that a wallet associated with the German state transferred about US$75 million (RM353.3 million) worth of tokens to exchanges on Thursday, the latest in a series of transfers.

Separately, administrators of the failed Mt Gox exchange are returning a hoard of bitcoin to creditors in stages. Speculators are uncertain about how much of the US$8 billion haul will end up being sold.

Struggling miners

The operators of the power-hungry computers that underpin the bitcoin blockchain are continuing to absorb the financial hit of April’s so-called halving, which curbed the new tokens they receive for the work they do. One response from these bitcoin miners is to sell some of their inventory of tokens.

“Bitcoin continues to battle with selling pressure from miners,” wrote Noelle Acheson, author of the Crypto Is Macro Now newsletter.

Sentiment can turn quickly in crypto, for instance if weaker US economic data spur bets on looser Federal Reserve monetary policy. Pending approvals for US exchange-traded funds investing in number two token ether could lift the mood too.

The interpretation of US political developments may also shift. Bitwise Asset Management Inc chief investment officer Matt Hougan argued that potential turnover at the top of the Democratic ticket is “more likely than not to settle out in an improved place for crypto.” He said Washington’s attitude to digital assets had changed for the better in the past year.

Speculators are now scouring bitcoin charts to see if closely-watched technical levels hold or subside. The cryptocurrency just closed below an approximation of its six-month moving average price. Such breaches presage more losses if history is any guide, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Uploaded by Magessan Varatharaja

Source: TheEdge - 5 Jul 2024

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