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Ether Tumbles as Concern Increases That ICOs Are Cashing Out

Ether, the cryptocurrency of the distributed-ledger network, tumbled by as much 17 percent Monday, the biggest drop since March.

Ether Tumbles as Concern Increases That ICOs Are Cashing Out
A collection of bitcoin, litecoin and ethereum tokens sit in this arranged photograph in Danbury, U.K. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Initial coin offerings using the Ethereum blockchain are seen as one of the main catalysts for sending Ether’s price surging last year. Now they’re being blamed for its decline.

Ether, the cryptocurrency of the distributed-ledger network, tumbled by as much 17 percent Monday, the biggest drop since March. The price slumped to as low as $285, pushing it below $300 for the first time since November. The digital coin is down about 60 percent this year, compared with Bitcoin’s 54 percent slide.

Ether Tumbles as Concern Increases That ICOs Are Cashing Out

Ether skyrocketed over $1,000 in February in part as startups built projects on top of the Ethereum blockchain and sold digital tokens in exchange for ether in crowd sales known as initial coin offerings. Investors who bought Ether to participate in those ICOs drove up the price. Now, some of those projects are cashing out to cover expenses and on concern this year’s cryptocurrency bear market will drag out, according to Biswa Das, who runs cryptocurrency quantitative hedge fund BloomWater Capital.

“These startups are raising a lot of funds but they don’t have treasury management or enough cash management experience, so they’re selling too early and causing a lot of pressure in the market,” said Das. “It was fine last year but right now the the market is so fragile that it causes a lot of pressure.”

Bear Market

At the height of Ether’s rally last year, where it soared more than 100 times from below $10, the digital coin grew so much, it comprised 32 percent of the total cryptocurrency market, compared with Bitcoin’s 39 percent at the time. Some speculated Ether would eventually overtake Bitcoin as the most valuable cryptocurrency, a phenomenon known as the “flippening." Projects who raised funds at the top of the market will be the most compelled to sell, said Das, who helps startups sell ether across multiple exchanges, to minimize market impact.

Pressure from ICOs cashing out is compounding with generalized bearishness in the cryptocurrency market, with market capitalization dropping to about $200 billion from a high of over $800 billion in January, on concern about tightening regulation and slow adoption.

Worries that the Ethereum platform won’t be able to withstand enough transaction volumes to support applications for the mass-market, as competitors spring up, have also weighed on the digital asset this year. While raising billions, most ICOs don’t have working products while many have been fraudulent or have had security issues.

More Pain?

“Investors are increasingly disillusioned with tokens and ICOs, most of which have been launched on top of Ethereum and we’re seeing this play out in the market with continued downward price pressure," said Spencer Bogart at Blockchain Capital LLC.

Assuming ICO liquidations of $5 billion or so led to the continued pressure on the Ether price, the negative impact has been magnified due to deteriorating sentiment and low liquidity, wrote Lex Sokolin of Autonomous Research LLP in a note last month.

Research website Santiment, which compiles a selection of Ethereum-based projects, estimates startups have spent over 110,000 ether in the past 30 days.

Startups are likely not done cashing out on Ether, but longer term, continued demand to build and hold ICOs on the platform should cause the coin to rebound, Das said. Ethereum remains the most popular platform for startups to build blockchain-based applications, as it’s used by more than 90 percent of projects.

“The pain is probably not over,” he said.

For more on Ethereum, check out the Decrypted podcast:

To contact the reporters on this story: Camila Russo in New York at crusso15@bloomberg.net;Olga Kharif in Portland at okharif@bloomberg.net

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

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