autostrad rent a car, dubai airport terminal 2 arrival reviews cheap 2 week car rental uae tesla carasti car rental convertible car hire san francisco cheap car rental athens downtown dubizzle dubai classifieds x car rental dubai reviews monthly rental hire car dubai taxi from abu dhabi to dubai airport rent a car at dubai rent a car dubai discount hyundai dubai car rental tampa florida cheap lexus for sale dubai rent a car dubai without credit card cheap cars for rent in dubai cheap car rental oakland airport rent a car dubai bmw 7 series cheap car rental palmerston north karachi rent a car car hire bali rent luxury car car rental abu dhabi luxury mazda 6 mileage in uae rent a car pakistan cheap car rental bangkok airport don muang cheap car rental albufeira
  • Call-in Numbers: 917-633-8191 / 201-880-5508

  • Now Playing

    Title

    Artist

    The cryptocurrency suffered a collapse of nearly $6,000 on January 6, in a new blow for Bitcoin traders. Investors have pointed to a crackdown on mining and blocks on a spot Bitcoin exchange traded fund.

    As of 10:45pm on January 6, Bitcoin was trading at £31,920.10 according to CoinDesk.

    However, at 7:29pm on January 5, the cryptocurrency was trading at £33,915.55.

    The collapse represented a -5.88 percent drop over the course of a day.

    Ethereum also collapsed between January 5 and 6, seeing a -3.34 percent drop over the day for a value of £2,530.73.

    The crypto’s latest price woes saw a mystery trader, who owns the largest share of Bitcoin in the world, see their wallet’s value crash..

    According to BitInforCharts, wallet 34xp4vRoCGJym3xR7yCVPFHoCNxv4Twseo had $16.29billion (£12.28bn) worth of the crypto on Friday.

    By Saturday morning, that had dropped to $15.45billion (£11.65bn) then to $13.81billion (£10.41bn) by the evening, wiping out $2.48 billion in one day.

    The trader has seen the value of his stash sink by $5.5million (£4.15m) in less than a month.

    READ MORE: Bitcoin value surge predicted to hit $100k in 5 years

    It comes as the US Federal Reserve’s December meeting minutes were released, in which the central bank indicated it would dial back its supportive monetary policy, including reducing the number of bonds it holds.

    Vijay Ayyar, vice president of corporate development and international at cryptocurrency exchange Luno explained to CNBC: “Overall, I think the global markets have shown weakness in light of the recent Fed moves to raise interest rates.

    “Hence, I do think the drop yesterday is quite correlated. We’ve seen U.S. markets fall yesterday and as a result, all other risk asset classes fared equally poorly including crypto.

    “Specifically with regard to Bitcoin and crypto, the last 4 weeks have seen some weak price action owing to a lack of interest/demand, holiday season and potentially similar factors.”

    DON'T MISS

    Yuya Hasegawa, crypto market analyst at Japanese bitcoin exchange , also told CNBC the crypto could fall further.

    He said Bitcoin could potentially drop to $40,000 if upcoming December nonfarm payrolls data shows strong job growth.

    He added: “The downward pressure on the price is expected to continue until the market fully prices in the tighter-than-expected future monetary policy.”

    Goldman Sachs has predicted that Bitcoin could hit $100,000 within five years if more investors see it as an alternative to gold.

    In a research note, Zach Pandl, co-head of foreign exchange strategy, said: “Hypothetically, if Bitcoin's share of the store of value market were to rise to 50 per cent over the next five years (with no growth in overall demand for stores of value) its price would increase to just over $100,000, for a compound annualised return of 17 percent to 18 percent.”

    However, in December, the Bank of England warned Bitcoin could be “worthless” and people investing in the digital currency should be prepared to lose everything.

    The deputy governor, Sir Jon Cunliffe, said the Bank had to be ready for risks linked to the rise of the crypto asset following rapid growth in its popularity.

    He told the BBC: “Their price can vary quite considerably and [bitcoins] could theoretically or practically drop to zero.”

    Read More


    Reader's opinions

    Leave a Reply