Bitcoin, Ether near multi-month lows following hawkish Federal Reserve minutes

Published Thu, Jan 6, 2022 · 05:45 AM

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    [HONG KONG] Bitcoin fell below US$43,000 on Thursday, testing multi-month lows after minutes from the Federal Reserve's last meeting showed it leaning toward more aggressive policy action, which sapped investor appetite for riskier assets.

    The world's largest cryptocurrency was last at US$42,700, down 1.7 per cent, having lost 5.2 per cent on Wednesday.

    A break below last month's trough of US$42,000 would make it the weakest since September.

    The token hit a record high of US$69,000 in November.

    The fall "correlated with the 'risk off' move across most traditional asset classes," said Matt Dibb, COO of Singapore-based crypto fund distributor, Stack Funds, pointing to the declines in the Nasdaq in particular.

    Moves in cryptocurrency markets are becoming more aligned with those in traditional markets as the number of institutions trading both crypto and other assets grows.

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    The Nasdaq plunged more than 3 per cent overnight in its biggest one-day percentage drop since February, after Fed minutes showed US policymakers had discussed reducing the bank's balance sheet at their December meeting, when they also decided to accelerate finishing their bond buying programme.

    Share markets in Asia sold off on Thursday as well, while US Treasury yields edged higher.

    Ether, the world's second-largest cryptocurrency which underpins the ethereum network, lost 5.2 per cent on Wednesday, and touched its lowest level since October, before bouncing back slightly to US$3,460.

    Crypto analysts were also watching to see whether anti-government protests in Kazakhstan, which were initially sparked by rising fuel prices, would affect the bitcoin network.

    The central Asian nation was the world's second-largest centre for bitcoin mining, Britain's Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance said last year.

    The Kazakh government late last year began cracking down on some miners, fearing the energy-intensive process was using too much power.

    REUTERS

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