Bitcoin price falling, cryptocurrency crash?
Hi, welcome back to #worldwide label post of my blog, so you can see the information around the world that i'm sum up for you.
![]() |
| Bitcoin price going down |
Even by Bitcoin’s standards, Wednesday was pretty wild. The price of the famously volatile digital currency fell nearly 30% at one point after the China Banking Association warned member banks of the risks associated with digital currencies. The decline narrowed to below 10% in the afternoon, but Bitcoin had still lost about $70 billion in market value in 24 hours.
Bitcoin has lost about 38% of its value since April
13 when it hit a high of more than $64,800, according to Coindesk. The China
warning was just the latest headwind: Before Wednesday, Tesla’s decision to not
accept the digital currency as payment for cars after it said it would and
murmurings in Washington about tighter regulation of digital currencies had put
pressure on Bitcoin. The price is still up about 31% in 2021 and nearly 300%
from a year ago.
Before Wednesday, Tesla's decision to not accept the digital currency as payment for cars, along with concerns about tighter regulation of digital currencies, were major factors in the decline. The price is still up about 31% in 2021 and nearly 300% from a year ago.
How Bitcoin Works?
Bitcoin is a
digital currency that is not tied to a bank or government and allows users to
spend money anonymously. The coins are created by users who "mine"
them by lending computing power to verify other users' transactions. They
receive Bitcoins in exchange. The coins also can be bought and sold on
exchanges with U.S. dollars and other currencies. Some businesses take Bitcoin
as payment, and a number of financial institutions allow it in their clients'
portfolios, but overall mainstream acceptance is still limited.
Bitcoins are
basically lines of computer code that are digitally signed each time they
travel from one owner to the next. Transactions can be made anonymously, making
the currency popular with libertarians as well as tech enthusiasts, speculators
and criminals.
Bitcoins have to be stored in a digital wallet, either online through an exchange like Coinbase, or offline on a hard drive using specialized software. According to Coinbase, there are about 18.7 million Bitcoins in circulation and only 21 million will ever exist. The reason for that is unclear, and where all the Bitcoins are is anyone's guess.
What happen to the price?
On Wednesday,
a statement posted on the Chinese Banking Association's website said financial
institutions should "resolutely refrain" from providing services
using digital currencies because of their volatility.
Virtually
every cryptocurrency fell after the industry group's statement. Bitcoin slumped
to $30,202 before recovering to $38,038, down 12% on the day, according to
Coindesk. Most cryptocurrencies lost between 7% and 22% of their value and
shares of Coinbase dropped 5.4%.
Could a digital currency selloff cause broader economic damage?
Regulators
aren't very worried about a possible crash in digital currencies dragging down
the rest of the financial system or economy.
Even with the
recent sell-off, digital currencies have a market value of about $1.5 trillion,
according to the website coinmarketcap.com. But that pales compared with the
$46.9 trillion stock market, $41.3 trillion residential real estate market and
nearly $21 trillion Treasury market at the start of the year.
The European
Central Bank said Wednesday that the risk of cryptocurrencies affecting the
financial system's stability looks "limited at present." In large
part, that's because they're still not widely used for payments and
institutions under its purview still have little exposure to crypto-linked
instruments.
Earlier this
month, the Federal Reserve said a survey of market contacts found roughly one
in five cited cryptocurrencies as a potential shock to the system over the next
12 to 18 months. That's a turnaround from the fall, when a similar survey found
none mentioning cryptocurrencies.
Doesn’t Elon Musk have a role here?
Yes, and a
fairly big one. Musk announced in February that his electric car company Tesla
had invested $1.5 billion in Bitcoin. In March, Tesla began accepting Bitcoin
as payment. Those actions contributed to the run-up in Bitcoin's price, and
Musk also promoted the digital currency Dogecoin, which also spiked in value.
However, Musk
reversed course in just a short time, saying last week that Tesla would stop
accepting Bitcoin because of the potential environmental damage that can result
from Bitcoin mining. The announcement sent Bitcoin falling below $50,000 and
set the tone for the big pullback in most cryptocurrencies.
A number of
Bitcoin fans pushed back on Musk's reasoning. Fellow billionaire Mark Cuban
said that gold mining is much more damaging to the environment than the mining
of Bitcoin.
A 2019 study
by the Technical University of Munich and the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology found that the Bitcoin network generates an amount of CO2 similar to
a large Western city or an entire developing country like Sri Lanka. But a
University of Cambridge study last year estimated that on average, 39% of
"proof-of-work" crypto mining was powered by renewable energy,
primarily hydroelectric energy.
But some companies are using Bitcoin?
The digital
payment company Square and its CEO Jack Dorsey also the CEO of Twitter have
been big proponents of Bitcoin. Overstock.com also accepts Bitcoin, and in
February, BNY Mellon, the oldest bank in the U.S., said it would include
digital currencies in the services it provides to clients. And Mastercard said
it would start supporting "select crypto currencies" on its network.
Bitcoin has become popular enough that more than 300,000 transactions typically occur in an average day, according to Bitcoin wallet site blockchain.info. Still, its popularity is low compared with cash and credit cards.
There is skepticism around Bitcoin?
Yes, plenty of
it. Tracking Bitcoin's price is obviously easier than trying to figure out its
value, which is why so many institutions, experts and traders are skeptical
about it and cryptocurrency in general. Digital currencies were seen as
replacements for paper money, but that hasn't happened so far.
Federal
Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said the central bank prefers to call crypto
coins "crypto assets," because their volatility undermines their
ability to store value, a basic function of a currency.
While some banks and financial services companies are getting in on it, others are staying away.
How much oversight is there?
Washington
officials have been talking about regulating digital currencies more, and
worries about a heavier hand have played a role in the recent swoon in prices.
Gary Gensler, who took over as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission last month, has said that cryptocurrency markets would benefit from more oversight to protect investors.
In a hearing before the House's financial services committee earlier this month, Gensler said neither the SEC nor the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which he used to head, has a "regulatory framework" for trading on cryptocurrency exchanges yet. He said he thought Congress would ultimately have to address it because "there's really not protection against fraud or manipulation."
How Bitcoin came to be?
It's a
mystery. Bitcoin was launched in 2009 by a person or group of people operating under
the name Satoshi Nakamoto. Bitcoin was then adopted by a small clutch of
enthusiasts. Nakamoto dropped off the map as bitcoin began to attract
widespread attention. But proponents say that doesn't matter: The currency
obeys its own internal logic.
In 2016, An Australian entrepreneur stepped forward and claimed to be the founder of Bitcoin, only to say days later that he did not "have the courage" to publish proof that he is. No one has claimed credit for the currency since.









3 Komentar
Bitcoin treasury Thanks for a very interesting blog. What else may I get that kind of info written in such a perfect approach? I’ve a undertaking that I am simply now operating on, and I have been at the look out for such info.
BalasHapusKomentar ini telah dihapus oleh pengarang.
BalasHapusBitcoin atm Dallas Texas Thanks for a very interesting blog. What else may I get that kind of info written in such a perfect approach? I’ve a undertaking that I am simply now operating on, and I have been at the look out for such info.
BalasHapus