Andriy Onufriyenko
Bitcoin dipped below $40,000 on Monday for the first time since September 2021, as cryptocurrencies across the board slumped in the wake of a risk-off shift spurred by a hawkish Federal Reserve.
The price of the world's biggest cryptocurrency by market value was down 6% to $39,774 on Monday morning, according to Bloomberg data. But by midday, the price was back above $41,000.
Still, bitcoin has tumbled 11% since the start of the year, and sits roughly 40% below its record high of $69,000 reached in November.
«Bitcoin's recent fall from grace has been epic, and it might just fall even further in the coming days, as Jerome Powell is set to be grilled by the Senate Banking Committee tomorrow,» Giles Coghlan, chief analyst at HYCM told Insider via email Monday, referring to the Fed's chairman.
On Saturday, the Crypto Fear and Greed Index fell to 10, representing the most fearful level since the crypto market bottomed on July 21, 2021.
But Marcus Sotiriou, analyst at digital asset broker GlobalBlock, said he expects the asset to see an upside in the short term to the mid-$40,000 level and, possibly, a strong rally soon after that.
Shortly after bitcoin's July market bottom, it rallied over 100%, and the same could happen this time again, he explained in a note Monday.
The crypto downturn began last Wednesday when the central bank released hawkish minutes from its December Federal Open Market Committee meeting, which signaled the Fed could tighten monetary policy faster than previously expected.
Bitcoin saw outflows totaling $107 million last week, according to CoinShares' weekly digital asset fund flows report, with CoinShares investment strategist James Butterfill calling it a «direct response to the FOMC
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