BITCOIN SINKS BELOW $40K AMIDST FEARS OF GLOBAL RECESSION

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Osinachi Gift

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Mar 4, 2022
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In light of the ongoing concerns about inflation and a possible global recession, the flagship crypto continued its drop on Tuesday.

Recently, Bitcoin has fallen under $40K mark, a drop of 5.4% for the day after touching a high above $47K. It dropped 15% in 24 hours today, falling below $40,000 for the first time since March 15th.

Ethereum, the second-largest crypto by market value, is trading roughly over $3K, a decline of more than 6% since the middle of last month, after dropping below this threshold earlier in the day.It’s part of a larger trend, with crypto markets tumbling 8.5% in the span of 24 hours to hit a market cap of $1.84 trillion, according to CoinMarketCap.

Bitcoin, which is historically fairly correlated to other cryptocurrency prices is, of late, increasingly correlated with stock prices. In March, BTC’s price correlation with the S&P 500 hit 0.49, with -1 meaning they move exactly opposite and 1 meaning they move in perfect tandem. It was the highest rate since October 2020, per Arcane Research.

If you’re looking for plausible answers as to why, it’s worth checking out the equities markets. The S&P 500, an index of 500 top publicly traded companies in the U.S., closed down 1.7%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended Monday 1.2% lower, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq lost a full 2.2% of its value.


Of course, stock prices should also be considered because there are so many things going wrong with it.

There’s the ongoing Russian war in Ukraine, a new round of COVID lockdowns in China, and, of course, the Federal Reserve’s decision to aggressively raise interest rates and choke off the supply of money into the economy.

The Nasdaq was already down nearly 4% from Monday through Friday last week. The weekend hasn’t made things much better. With less money pumping into the economy as the Fed seeks to fight inflation, crypto market caps very well may deflate, according to BitMEX founder Arthur Hayes. The billionaire investment banker-turned crypto entrepreneur wrote on Sunday of a “coming crypto carnage” and predicted that both Bitcoin and Ether had much further to fall.

“Bitcoin and Ether will bottom well before the Fed acts and U-turns its policy from tight to loose,” he wrote. He predicted they will test the $30,000 and $2,500 thresholds before the end of June. Hayes previously predicted, when the price of BTC was below $5,000, that it would reach $10,000 in 2019. That turned out to be prescient, as the price rallied to above $12,000. A year earlier, he suggested that BTC could hit $50,000 that year and would bottom out at between $3,000 and $5,000. While he was way off on the former, the latter prediction was correct.

Bitcoin bulls are hoping Hayes’ most recent prediction is wrong. But a look at today’s price movements indicates he could be on to something.

Optics

· The decline in Bitcoin’s 50-day moving average, below $42K, has investors wary. In the event of a fix below this level, a direct path to the area of the March lows near $38K is likely.

· Altcoins such as Terra’s LUNA token, SOL, and ADA also suffered losses by double digits. Also beaten down significantly were meme coins Dogecoin and Shiba Inu. There was little trading.

· The NY Fed released a study on Monday revealing that US consumers expect inflation to pick up in the near future. Prices for food and housing are expected to rise dramatically in the next 12 months, raising inflation expectations from 6.0% to 6.6%. Expectations for 3 years down from 4.2%.

· According to consumers, rent is expected to rise 10.2% in the year ahead, while food costs will jump 9.6%.

· A 6% increase in home prices is expected, up from 5.7% previously. Survey participants predict that inflationary pressures will worsen before they improve, which will worry Federal Reserve officials.
 

keilecpod

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Jan 26, 2021
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Inflation is a big deal, and I have repeatedly warned that the policies enacted in 2021 were going to lead to higher inflation. None of this is surprising nor is the fact that the fed has entered the scene, reversed loose monetary strategy, and has no choice but to try and fight it. Hyperinflation, the kind that could collapse the dollar, would likely be worse than any recession caused by steps to prevent it. The markets are on their own now and on top of that, they are trying to shake off everything else being thrown at them.

Investors aret is act first, think later mindset, the specter of higher interest rates and higher inflation rules the price action. This adds more concern that the stock market is a treacherous playground now. The consensus narrative continues to see rates rising, presenting a headwind for stocks. Many investors hit the sell button first then decide if rising interest rates and/or inflation is problematic enough to warrant their decision. Not exactly the way to manage your money.

Add in the Ukraine invasion and the equity markets have become mesmerized with the daily/weekly headlines. Going back to the economic issues, it isn't written in stone that all has to end badly. However, let there be no doubt that what is transpiring now in response to these issues is more self-inflicted pain.

Proceeding cautiously and tactically has been the way to proceed, and it's more important than ever to listen to the stock market's message now.
 
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