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Bitcoin dips below $40,000 for the first time in nearly a month, in broad crypto market slump

Adam Morgan McCarthy   

Bitcoin dips below $40,000 for the first time in nearly a month, in broad crypto market slump
  • Bitcoin and ethereum both fell by as much as 5% at one point on Tuesday as investors ditched riskier assets.
  • The crypto market was in the red across the board as solana, cardano and polkadot all lost as much as 6%.

Bitcoin and ethereum fell on Tuesday, echoing weakness in technology stocks and other riskier assets, as the threat of inflation and increasing likelihood of steep rate rises left investors looking for less volatile investments.

Bitcoin was down 3.1% over the past 24 hours at $40,214, having slipped below $40,000 earlier in the day, according to CoinMarketCap, while ethereum's native token fell 2.9% to $3,024. These losses leave the two leading cryptocurrencies down about 13% over the past week.

This is the first time bitcoin has dipped below the $40,000 mark since the middle of March. The market has come under fairly sustained pressure in the past week, as red-hot inflation around the world has raised the chances of a string of interest-rates rises and Russia's war in Ukraine quashed investor appetite for riskier assets.

Marcus Sotiriou, Analyst at GlobalBlock, echoed this sentiment in his market note on Tuesday.

"In my opinion, this can mainly be put down to the current macro headwinds at hand. With soaring inflation, retail does not have enough money to invest significant amounts in what they deem as 'risky' assets like cryptocurrencies," he said.

A measure of this mood is the Crypto Fear and Greed Index, which slipped to 20, representing 'extreme fear'. The Crypto Fear and Greed index measures sentiment from social media, volatility, momentum and also surveys between 2,000-3,000 people weekly.

Just three weeks ago, the index was at its highest point since November, as bitcoin rallied above $47,000 and the broader crypto market was more bullish.

However, in the past week inflation figures and the minutes from the most recent Federal Reserve meeting have dented this risk appetite and pushed investors back to towards more defensive assets.

Bitcoin remains highly correlated with large-cap technology stocks, which some market watchers — most notably, Arthur Hayes, the co-founder of crypto exchange BitMEX — think will make it vulnerable to a bigger decline if that sector comes under renewed pressure

In a blog post Monday, Hayes said he foresees tech stocks being dragged lower by rising nominal interest rates, worsening global fiat liquidity conditions, and falling economic growth.

"As long as the 10-day correlation stays high, we must stay defensive on our crypto positioning," wrote Hayes, who believes that bitcoin could test the $30,000 level towards the end of the second quarter.

Smaller coins also felt the hit, with a number of the more widely traded tokens losing up to 6% at one point during the morning on Tuesday.

Cardano was down 5.89% over the past day to trade at $0.95, while solana dropped 5.96%, trading at $103.27, meanwhile polkadot fell 5.38% to trade at $17.81 at the time of writing.

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