Bitcoin Plummets Below $20,000 for First Time
Since Late 2020
Its fall was accelerated in recent weeks by the
collapse of two major cryptocurrency projects while sowing doubts about the
stability of the overall cryptocurrency market.
The plunge follows several months of declines for
Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency.
Erin
GriffithDavid Yaffe-Bellany
By Erin
Griffith and David Yaffe-Bellany
June 18,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/18/technology/bitcoin-20000.html
SAN
FRANCISCO — The price of Bitcoin fell below $20,000 for the first time since
December 2020 on Saturday, amid a broader market meltdown driven by rising
interest rates, inflation and economic uncertainty spurred by the war in
Ukraine.
The plunge
— it sank below $19,000 at one point Saturday — took place over several months
for Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency. Its fall was accelerated in
recent weeks by the collapse of two major cryptocurrency projects, Terra-Luna
and Celsius, while sowing doubts about the stability of the overall
cryptocurrency market. Bitcoin has erased some $900 billion of value since its
peak in November.
From March
2020 to November 2021, the price of a single Bitcoin rose twelvefold to
$64,000. It passed its previous record of $19,738 in November 2020.
The drastic
sell-offs show how intertwined and complex the crypto markets have become in
recent years, said R.A. Farrokhnia, a professor at Columbia Business School who
specializes in financial technology. As investors flee to less risky assets,
“this creates a cascade effect on top of the contagion effect,” he said.
Investing
in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies surged in the pandemic alongside other
risky bets on assets like “meme stocks,” collectibles including sneakers and
trading cards, and digital art and media known as nonfungible tokens, or NFTs.
The speculation was driven by free-flowing stimulus checks, low interest rates
on other investments, a social media frenzy, pandemic boredom and a fear of
missing out on the next big thing.
Bitcoin was
designed to transform the way people do transactions. The digital currency
relies on a decentralized network of computers that log each transaction on a
permanent record known as a blockchain. The record cannot be changed or
controlled by anyone, including governments.
Bitcoin
Price
The
excitement — and potential profits — generated by Bitcoin’s rise attracted
newcomers to learn about, work on and invest in cryptocurrencies. Some
investors saw Bitcoin as a safe place to park cash after central banks flooded
the economy with money, creating fears of inflation. Bitcoin has a built-in
limit to its supply; there will only ever be 21 million of the tokens. Around
19 million have been electronically mined so far.
The run-up
also pushed Wall Street and Fortune 500 companies to become more open to
something they once dismissed. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley announced plans
to offer wealthy customers access to cryptocurrency funds. PayPal and its
subsidiary, Venmo, created options for trading and shopping with
cryptocurrency.
Square,
another payments company, bought $50 million of Bitcoin and changed its name to
Block, in part to signify its work with blockchain technology. Tesla bought
$1.5 billion of it. The venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz raised $4.5
billion for a fourth cryptocurrency-focused fund, doubling its previous one.
Excitement
hit a peak in April last year when Coinbase, a cryptocurrency exchange, went
public at an $85 billion valuation, a coming-out party for the industry.
Bitcoin topped $60,000 for the first time.
Last
summer, El Salvador announced that it would become the first country to
classify Bitcoin as legal tender, alongside the U.S. dollar. The country’s
president updated his Twitter profile picture to include laser eyes, a calling
card of Bitcoin believers. The value of El Salvador’s $105 million investment
in Bitcoin has been slashed in half as the price has fallen.
Senators
and mayors around the United States began touting cryptocurrency, as the
industry spent heavily on lobbying. Mayor Eric Adams of New York, who was
elected in November, said he would take his first three paychecks in Bitcoin.
Senators Cynthia Lummis, Republican of Wyoming, and Kirsten Gillibrand,
Democrat of New York, proposed legislation that would create a regulatory
framework for the industry, giving more authority to the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, an agency that crypto companies have openly courted.
Through the
frenzy, celebrities fueled the fear of missing out, flogging their NFTs on talk
shows and talking up blockchain projects on social media. This year, the Super
Bowl featured four ads for crypto companies, including Matt Damon warning
viewers that “fortune favors the brave.”
That
swaggering optimism faltered this spring as the stock market plummeted,
inflation soared and layoffs hit the tech sector. Investors began losing
confidence in their crypto investments, moving money to less risky assets.
Several high-profile projects crashed amid withdrawals. TerraForm Labs, which
created TerraUSD, a so-called stablecoin, and Celsius, an experimental crypto
bank, both collapsed, wiping out billions in value and sending the broader
market into a tailspin.
“The
circular flow of funds brings questions about whether this entire ecosystem
always needs outsiders to come in and sustain it,” Mr. Farrokhnia said.
Even as
investing in cryptocurrencies became more mainstream, Bitcoin did not find much
success as a means of everyday transaction. Its price swings are volatile, and
its upward trajectory has made it more valuable to hold long term. Companies
created elaborate ways to make loans or let people use their Bitcoin as
collateral in a sector that is known as decentralized finance, or DeFi.
At just
over $20,000, around half of all Bitcoin wallets were still sitting on profits,
according to an analysis by the Columbia Business School. Mr. Farrokhnia said
61 percent of the addresses had not sold in the last 12 months, showing that
many people bought into it to hold it.
Regulators
have said cryptocurrencies enable tax evasion, risky behavior and fraud. Last
year, China cracked down on cryptocurrency mining and trading, and regulators
in Hong Kong, Canada and the United States have warned of regulatory actions.
Britain has also banned Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange.
Bitcoin’s
widespread use by criminals, including the hackers who attacked the Colonial
Pipeline last year, has generated further scrutiny. But Bitcoin’s transparency
— the ledger is public for anyone to see — has also helped prosecutors track
down some criminals and even recover ransom payments.
The recent
sell-off has led to cutbacks at companies that were in hyper-growth just a few
months ago. Coinbase laid off 18 percent of its employees in June after posting
shrinking revenue and losing active users. Other crypto companies, including
Gemini, BlockFi and Crypto.com, have also cut jobs.
In past
downturns, known in the industry as “crypto winters,” supporters encouraged
their peers to invest more while prices were low, or “buy the dip.” But this
time, analysts said, the message is not landing.
“You have
so much pessimism in the space,” said Ed Moya, a crypto analyst at OANDA.
“There’s no confidence right now to buy the dip.”
Correction:
June 18, 2022
An earlier
version of this article misstated the last time the price of Bitcoin was
$20,000. It was in December 2020, not November 2020. It passed its previous
record of $19,738 in November 2020.

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