ADVERTISEMENT

Ether Tumbles in Crypto Selloff as Goldman Slows Trading Plans

Drop after a report that Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is pulling back on near-term plans to set up a cryptocurrency trading desk.

Ether Tumbles in Crypto Selloff as Goldman Slows Trading Plans
Bitcoins sit on top of a collection of U.S. one dollar bills in this arranged photograph. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- A fresh sign that the financial industry’s love affair with cryptocurrencies is cooling pummeled the largest tokens.

Ether sank as much as 15 percent and Bitcoin fell almost 7 percent to a three-week low amid a report that Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is pulling back on near-term plans to set up a crypto trading desk. Litecoin and Ripple followed suit, and U.S. stocks with exposure to the digital-coin market also slumped.

Ether Tumbles in Crypto Selloff as Goldman Slows Trading Plans

Wednesday’s selloff comes as Goldman joins a growing list of traditional financial players that have abandoned or delayed crypto projects after a rout this year. Michael Novogratz, one of the sector’s biggest bulls, shelved plans for crypto hedge fund and opened a merchant bank for the sector instead. The Securities and Exchange Commission’s latest rejection of crypto exchange-traded funds sparked an early-August swoon in digital assets.

“The expectation of adoption by Wall Street has been a major theme for the cryptocurrency market for the last year, so any kind of updates on that can certainly move the prices,” said Mati Greenspan, senior market analyst at currency trader eToro, by phone from Russia. “Even if it’s not true, it should be enough to cause a minor selloff like this in cryptocurrencies.”

Goldman Sachs has moved its plan for a crypto trading desk lower down on its priority list, Business Insider reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The Wall Street banking giant is focused on other digital-coin services, such as a custody product, the report said.

Goldman Sachs had been taking baby steps around cryptocurrencies since hiring Justin Schmidt earlier this year as head of its digital-asset markets. It was among the first Wall Street firms to clear Bitcoin futures offered by Cboe and CME Group Inc.

“In response to client interest in various digital products we are exploring how best to serve them in this space,” a spokesman for Goldman Sachs said. “At this point we have not reached a conclusion on the scope of our digital asset offering.”

Bitcoin has lost half of its value in 2018, while trading on crypto exchanges has fallen by 80 percent. The overall market for the tokens is currently worth about $223 billion, down from more than $800 billion in early January, according to Coinmarketcap.com.

Riot Blockchain Inc. slid 6.3 percent, while Marathon Patent Group Inc. lost 7.7 percent. Overstock.com Inc. dropped 2.8 percent.

“It’s a little bit shocking to me the attention this market gets versus its size,” Chris Concannon, chief operating officer of Cboe Global Markets Inc., said last month. “It’s a fifth of Apple. The entire crypto market is a fifth of Apple.”

For more on Ether, check out the Decrypted podcast:

--With assistance from Sridhar Natarajan.

To contact the reporters on this story: Todd White in Madrid at twhite2@bloomberg.net;Lily Katz in New York at lkatz31@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeremy Herron at jherron8@bloomberg.net, Dave Liedtka

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.