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Well, so much for loving $6,500. After what feels like weeks of simply hovering at $6,500 and refusing to budge, the father of cryptocurrency has plunged by over five percent within the last 24 hours and is now trading for a measly $6,200. Itâs probably fair to say that 2018 has not been the year for bitcoin, and itâs not giving enthusiasts anything to go on.
This shouldnât come as a major surprise considering the stock market fell by over 800 points on Wednesday, leaving a lot of traders in the dust and wondering if the end of the bull market was near. Bitcoin and the stock market can sometimes mirror each otherâs behavior, so as the stocks fall, bitcoin appears ready to do the same.
In addition, this news all comes right after it was announced that bitcoin had struck a 17-month volatility low, so the fact that such a drastic overnight drop could occur is now bringing this sentiment into question. Whatâs interesting is that the drop is also coming at a time when global equities are suffering deeply, placing bitcoinâs âdigital goldâ status right in harmâs way.
Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at Oanda, argues that bitcoin has remained a massive âsell-off targetâ since last December, and its status has remained unchanged for months:
âThe selloff appears to have stretched to more exotic instruments, with bitcoin neither displaying the qualities one would expect of gold 2.0, as it has been touted as by some cryptocurrency enthusiasts, or simply escaping relatively unscathed as a new and relatively uncorrelated asset. This truly is a widespread selloff, and anything perceived as a risky asset has been in the firing line. What will be interesting is whether this will be enough to force bitcoin below $6,000, which has proven to be something of a floor for the crypto on numerous occasions this year.â
Bitcoinâs negative behavior appears to be rubbing off on other forms of crypto as well, such as Rippleâs XRP and Ethereum. Both are down significantly at the time of writing, along with Litecoin, Stellar, EOS and bitcoin cash.
Still, figures like Van Valkenburgh â director of research at Coin Center â remain upbeat about bitcoin, and feel that the infancy of its technology will not get in the way of a solid and robust future:
âIs it perfect? No, but neither was email when it was invented in 1972. Why should we want to build more public infrastructure? Why should we embrace blockchains over corporate intermediaries? A simple reason⊠Because the corporate intermediaries providing todayâs critical, but privately-owned infrastructure are becoming fewer, larger and more powerful, and their failures are increasingly grave.â
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.