BTC has been closely correlated with the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 — and on Thursday, this index officially entered correction territory.
BTC has been closely correlated with the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 — and on Thursday, this index officially entered correction territory.
Why is This Happening?
Further pain is expected as the Fed prepares to raise interest rates and end the stimulus measures that buoyed the economy during the pandemic.
And in other developments, Russia's central bank is considering an outright ban on trading and mining cryptocurrencies.
Moscow fears such digital assets can undermine financial stability, harm investors, and undermine its monetary policy.
Over on Crypto Twitter, Friday's painful losses were linked to the upcoming expiry of Bitcoin options.
And in a research note, Delphi Digital explained all risk assets — BTC in particular — are being hammered by a recent spike in bond yields, adding:
"The market is now pricing in at least four rate hikes this year, with the probability of a fifth ticking up this week."
Perhaps of greater concern to BTC investors should be the fact this sudden pullback wasn't followed by a significant rebound, as in early December.
Bitcoin maximalists tend to shrug off sharp declines in price — and instead prefer to take a long-term view. One of them, Raphael Schön, tweeted:
"Bitcoin is digital gold. It's also an open, public payment network. It's not digital tulips and won't go away. It's empowering people around the world. It's just getting started."
All eyes will be on the next meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, which is scheduled to take place on Jan. 25 and 26.