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Bitcoin hits one-week low as rising U.S. yields dent rally

Published 01/10/2021, 10:58 PM
Updated 01/10/2021, 11:40 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A representation of virtual currency Bitcoin and small toy figures are placed on computer motherboard

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Cryptocurrencies plunged on Monday, with bitcoin dropping more than 12% to a one-week low as rising U.S. bond yields lifted the dollar broadly and hurt other safe assets that pay no income.

Bitcoin fell as far as $33,447, its lowest since Jan. 6. Ethereum which often moves in tandem with bitcoin, fell as much as 20% to a one-week low of $1,007.51.

The falls are much larger than the 1% drop that sent gold prices to a one-month low, but reflect a wider dollar bounce against major fiat currencies as the prospect of higher U.S. interest rates tempers popular bets against the dollar. [FRX/]

"It's just another way of expressing a dollar view," said Chris Weston, head of research at brokerage Pepperstone in Melbourne.

"I know it's a macro play as well, but I do think that gold and bitcoin have been used in a fairly similar capacity," he said.

Losses pared a little by lunchtime in Asia to put bitcoin at $35,192 - about 16% below a record peak of $42,000 which the world's most popular cryptocurrency hit last week.

If sustained, the drop would be the third straight session of losses since that high, which represented an almost 1,000% gain from a one-year low of $3,850 that bitcoin hit last March.

Interest in bitcoin has been soaring as institutional investors began buying heavily, viewing it as both an inflation hedge and as exposed to gains if it became more widely adopted as a digital currency.

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J.P.Morgan strategists wrote on Jan. 5 that bitcoin has emerged as a rival to gold and could trade as high as $146,000 if it becomes established as a safe-haven asset.

Latest comments

The hedge funds just prop it up than sell to the rookies and get rich.
U know its garbage when the volatility is so high and unpredictable. Garbage bitcoin we go to zero.
Major crash in progress. Always happens to Ponzis.
In my opinion the sell off has nothing to do with US bond yields rising to 1%, it is a simple fact that people are cashing out huge gains on bitcoin. if you bought bitcoin two months ago you paid 10k, if you cashed out this weekend you sold for 42k.... it is 320% in two months, equal to 42 years of S&P 500 gains
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