Bitcoin
Bitcoin has pared some of the price drop it sustained in recent days, but there is no definitive answer on its prospects as a counter currency. Image Credit: Screengrab

New York: Bitcoin and other digital coins steadied Friday after posting some of the biggest declines since the onset of the pandemic, a selloff that stoked fresh questions about this year's boom in cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin climbed above $17,400, following a slide of as much as 14 per cent to $16,227 on Thursday. Fears over tighter crypto regulations and profit-taking after a frenetic rally were among the reasons cited for the tumble.

"After big rallies in shares and various other assets, they are all vulnerable to a bit of a pause," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors Ltd.. "But Bitcoin more than most, as it surged higher far more and had become far more frothy with speculative interest."

Read More

Is it broadbased enough?

The slump pared Bitcoin's rally this year to about 140 per cent, a climb that's split opinion. Crypto believers tout a broadening investor base and the search for a hedge against dollar weakness amid loose monetary policy as reasons for a durable boom. Set against that is a history of big swings, including the run up to a record three years ago that was followed by a spectacular bust.

Proponents of digital assets say the current focus on cryptocurrencies compared with 2017 is different because of growing institutional interest, for instance from the likes of Fidelity Investments and JPMorgan Chase & Co.. Just this week, Van Eck Associates Corp. launched a Bitcoin exchange-traded note on the Deutsche Boerse Xetra exchange. In October, PayPal Holdings Inc. said it would allow customers access to cryptocurrencies.

Missing out worries

Others see signs of retail investors piling in to chase momentum for fast gains, storing up an inevitable reckoning. The rout in Bitcoin began just hours after it rose to within $7 of its record high of $19,511 set in December 2017.

Concern about potential US crypto rules help explain Thursday's price drop across most major digital assets, said Ryan Rabaglia, global head of trading at OSL brokerage in Hong Kong.

"It's also not unusual to see a short-term pullback following periods of significant, accelerated gains as traders look to take profits before resetting once volatility subsides," he said. "Once the dust settles, we're back to business as usual with all medium to long-term bullish indicators still in play."

Profit-taking was inevitable and there are still factors in favor of Bitcoin as an asset class, according to Byron Goldberg in Sydney, who runs the Australian operations for Luno, the cryptocurrency exchange and trading platform.

"It continues to attract both institutional and retail attention as a 21st-century substitute to the gold play," he said.

Crypto 'whales'

A few large holders often referred to as whales own most Bitcoin. About 2 per cent of the anonymous ownership accounts that can be tracked on the cryptocurrency's blockchain control 95 per cent of the digital asset, according to researcher Flipside Crypto. That structure points to the risk of big price swings if major investors offload some of their stakes.

"Bitcoin may be a victim of its own success," said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets plc in Sydney. "Traders suggested several large holders moved to lock in gains as the cryptocurrency reached for all-time highs."

AMP Capital's Oliver said the depth of the recent plunge shows Bitcoin is "hardly a secure store of value", adding it may be vulnerable if COVID-19 vaccines lead to a sharp global recovery next year. "Money printing and the debasement of paper currencies that Bitcoin enthusiasts are seeking to protect against may start to fade as an issue," Oliver said.