Cryptocurrency Market Falls Below $1 Trillion, Bitcoin Nears 2022 Low

Following a selloff of cryptocurrencies that once again pushed the sector's total market value below $1 trillion, Bitcoin is flirting with a check of this year's lows, which would be a test of the year's lows.

As of seven o'clock in the morning local time in New York, the most prominent cryptocurrency had lost more than 6% since the beginning of the week and was trading at approximately $18,750. According to CoinGecko's data, the total market capitalization of cryptocurrencies has experienced a decline of the same proportion over the past twenty-four hours. The gains made on Tuesday in regard to ether were nullified by a decline of approximately 4.4%.

The rise in actual interest rates, which can be thought of as the true cost of borrowing, is putting a lot of pressure on a range of risky properties, and cryptocurrency is not an exception. The decline in the price of bitcoin is bringing it closer to a bottom of approximately $17,600 that was set in June in the wake of blowups at crypto lenders and hedge funds. This nadir was reached in the month of June.

On Bloomberg Television, Kevin Lavatory, head of investment insights at IDEG Asset Management Ltd., stated that "the macro story may be very difficult to be able to let go of and can drive risk property." "The price of bitcoin is now less than $20,000." We have been in this location before, and it is possible that we may perhaps go a little bit lower.

At the same time, there is still some excitement left over from the forthcoming update to the Ethereum community, which some analysts believe may attract investment flows into Ether and other forms of digital property.

"Bitcoin was around $3,000 during the first crypto winter, and if you measure trough to trough, the pattern is that we're heading higher in the long run," said Lavatory. "[T]he trend is that we're heading higher in the long run."

Around sixty percent of the largest tokens in the MVIS Cryp


Ojike Stella

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