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Bitcoin Bulls Point to Supply at 3-Year Low as Malaise Lingers
The largest digital asset by market value was down by less than 1% as of 12:03 p.m. in New York to trade around $41,229. It’s been glued to a tight trading range for the past few months, unable to break above any of the high points it reached at the start of the year. Market-watchers have a few explanations, including that speculative juices have been dried up as the Federal Reserve and other central banks start to raise interest rates. Another is that as long as Bitcoin dawdles below $47,000 — a break-even point for many new investors — it will remain stuck within its tight range because short-term traders will sell at every rally.
Aoifinn Devitt, chief investment officer at Moneta, says the fact that cryptocurrencies have only been around for a little more than a decade means there’s little history to go off to gauge how it might behave in a shock environment, or one where there’s persistent inflation.
“We’re in this process of discovery now, we’re finding out that it tends to be a very high-risk-reward asset that tends to sell off when risk is off the table,” Devitt said by phone from Chicago. “Because that process of discovery is going on, there have been these shock-waves that have been coursing through markets, certainly there’s not going to be a flight to safety into cryptocurrencies.”
Source: Bloomberg Business News