Bitcoin Retraces Most of Losses Sparked by Geopolitical Tension
The digital asset fell more than 5% to $60,300 as of 10:25 a.m. Friday in Singapore. Tokens such as Ether, Solana and meme-crowd favorite Dogecoin suffered heavier drops.
(Bloomberg) -- Bitcoin pared losses as a bout of acute geopolitical tension began to ease after earlier sparking steep drops in cryptocurrencies.
The digital asset at one point on Friday sank more than 6% to $59,643 but later steadied, changing hands at $62,160 as of 1:14 p.m. in Singapore. Tokens such as Ether, Solana and meme-crowd favorite Dogecoin also stabilized.
Israel launched a retaliatory strike on Iran less than a week after Tehran’s rocket and drone barrage, sending tremors through global markets. A report that nuclear facilities in the Iranian city of Isfahan were safe helped to salve some angst. Traditional havens such as bonds, gold and the dollar trimmed gains, while stocks and US equity futures came off session lows.
The tit-for-tat Middle East conflict is dominating the spotlight, overshadowing the Bitcoin halving expected later Friday that will curb new supply of the token.
Halvings historically bolstered the price of the largest digital asset. This time around, Bitcoin hit a record in mid-March before the event, leading to questions about whether the putative impact has already been discounted by traders.
Ongoing Israel-Iran violence could lead to a “general risk-off sentiment across crypto,” said Stefan von Haenisch, head of trading at OSL SG Pte. But it might take a “significant move lower” to undo all of the bullishness around the halving, he added.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Deutsche Bank AG strategists have said that the quadrennial halving is largely already priced in by investors. A batch of three-month-old spot-Bitcoin exchange-traded funds in the US have posted five straight days of net outflows ahead of the event.
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