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Bitcoin Takes Another Lurch Lower After Breaking $4,000 Level

Bitcoin Declines as Cryptocurrencies Take a Sudden Lurch Lower

(Bloomberg) -- Cryptocurrencies are taking investors for a volatile ride again after a relatively tranquil start to the year, with Bitcoin leading prices lower in two swift plunges.

The largest digital currency slumped as much as 11 percent to $3,574, breaking through the $4,000 level that it’s maintained for most of the first full week of the new year. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index, a gauge of the largest cryptocurrencies, fell 13 percent as so-called alt coins, including Ether, Litecoin and XRP, also retreated.

Bitcoin Takes Another Lurch Lower After Breaking $4,000 Level

Timothy Tam, co-founder and CEO of CoinFi, a cryptocurrency research firm in Hong Kong, said while there wasn’t an immediate reason for the abrupt sell-off, he did notice a large transfer of about 40,000 Ether into an exchange an hour before the drop.

“Usually transfer of Ethereum onto an exchange indicates an intent to sell, and if there is a sell-off on one exchange it compounds like dominoes to another because arbitragers will sell immediately on the other exchanges as well,” he said in a message.

The cryptocurrency industry took another blow earlier this week after Ethereum Classic, an offshoot of the second-largest digital currency, came under a so-called 51 percent attack, in which some computers supporting a network falsify transactions. Coinbase Inc., one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges, said Monday it had found “deep reorganizations” of the Ethereum Classic blockchain. Some $1.1 million in the coins may have been spent twice.

Cryptocurrency prices plummeted in 2018 amid ongoing security concerns and regulatory scrutiny. The industry has erased more than $700 billion in value from an all-time peak of over $835 billion last January, according to data compiled by CoinMarketCap.com.

To contact the reporter on this story: Eric Lam in Hong Kong at elam87@bloomberg.net

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

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.