Share this article

Bitcoin Falls 8%, Drops Below $62K Before Rebound

Other major cryptocurrencies saw similar declines.

Updated Apr 13, 2024, 10:51 p.m. Published Apr 13, 2024, 10:49 p.m. 2 min read
(CoinDesk Indices)

Bitcoin and the broader cryptocurrency market fell nearly 10% on Saturday, with the price of the largest digital asset briefly falling below $62,000 before recovering to around $64,000 as of press time.

It wasn't alone: other major digital assets saw similar falls over the past 24 hours, including ether {{ETH}}, which fell 7% to just under $3,000, BNB (down 9%) and solana {{SOL}} (down 12%), according to CoinGecko. Trading volume has risen over that same time period.

The decentralized finance (DeFi) sector has been hit particularly hard as a result of the market chaos, with depressed prices forcing liquidations and raising the potential of havoc for some protocols.

Among the protocols being closely watched is Ethena, the buzzy Ethereum project behind USDe, a "synthetic dollar" built to mirror the price of the US dollar. Ethena has attracted more than $2 billion in deposits, but it uses a controversial method for maintaining USDe's one-dollar "peg" that hasn't been tested under such adverse market conditions.

The immediate cause of Saturday's market declines was not clear, though former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes wrote in a blog post last week that dollar liquidity would drop right before tax payments are due in the U.S. on April 15 – this coming Monday. Lower liquidity would lead to lower prices, he said.

Read more: Bitcoin Could Slump Around Reward Halving Time, Arthur Hayes Says

The declines also came as Iran launched drone and missile strikes against Israel, in what the Iranian government said was retaliation for an airstrike on its consulate in Damascus, Syria that it attributed to Israel.

Crypto market prices began to recover after the X (formerly Twitter) account associated with Iran's Permanent Mission to the United Nations said "the matter can be deemed concluded," though it warned of a "considerably more severe" attack "should the Israeli regime make another mistake."

Higit pang Para sa Iyo

ETFs (Markus Winkler/Pixabay, modified by CoinDesk)

IBIT recorded its second-biggest single-day net outflow since launch on Wednesday, missing a January record by less than half a million dollars, as the Iran-driven sell-off pulled institutional money out of bitcoin.

Ano ang dapat malaman:

  • BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust saw $527.84 million in net outflows on Wednesday, its second-largest single-day withdrawal since launching in January and just shy of its record.
  • The 11 U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs together lost $733.43 million that day, extending a multi-session streak of outflows that has pulled more than $2...