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Bitcoin (BTC) was lower, though staying in its range over the past six days, between roughly $30,000 and $33,000.
Cryptocurrency traders and analysts planned to keep an eye on an expected Federal Reserve announcement Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Washington (19:00 UTC), detailing the U.S. central bank’s latest monetary-policy plans as the coronavirus continues to ravage the economy. At a scheduled press conference afterward, Chair Jerome Powell will likely field questions about the U.S. central bank’s $120 billion-a-month of bond purchases – a key focus for bitcoin traders betting that the ongoing money-printing could eventually lead to inflation.
“Bitcoin seems poised to consolidate a little more, but if the Fed is not dovish enough and the dollar rebounds, the $30,000 level could easily break,” Edward Moya, senior market analyst in New York for the London-based foreign-exchange brokerage Oanda, said in emailed comments.
(NOTE: CoinDesk’s Nathan DiCamillo talked to top economists including Ken Rogoff and Claudia Sahm about this week’s Fed meeting. The takeaway was that while no major announcements are expected Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues at the central bank will soon have to tackle the thorny issue of how to keep inflation from spiraling out of control once the economy opens back up. Full story: How Bitcoiners Should Watch the US Federal Reserve Meeting on Wednesday.)
In traditional markets, European shares slid and U.S. stock futures pointed to a lower open. Gold weakened 0.4% to $1,843 an ounce.
Market Moves
With bitcoin trading in a range, why not spend a little time discussing the potential market risks surrounding tether (USDT), the largest dollar-linked stablecoin? After all, as CoinDesk’s Daniel Cawrey reports, a lot of cryptocurrency traders and industry executives would rather ignore the topic altogether, even though in some ways it’s become more important than ever.
Tether has become a key source of liquidity for cryptocurrency traders in recent years, since the tokens can easily be moved around in blockchain-based digital markets.
But doubts have persisted for several years about the stablecoin, primarily related to a lack of full audits of the reserves backing the tokens. In 2018 a pair of academics wrote in a peer-reviewed research paper that tether minting might have helped inflate the bitcoin market during the 2017 bull run.
So one question is what might happen to bitcoin prices if ungainly revelations on tether emerge. Multiple ongoing investigations, including from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the New York Attorney General’s office, have dogged the stablecoin company, as detailed by Cawrey.
What makes this a more pressing issue now is the industry’s recent fast-paced growth, which might just magnify the risks: The outstanding amount of tether has roughly quintupled over the past year to about $25 billion.
Tether General Counsel Stuart Hoegner told CoinDesk, “We work with regulators and law enforcement agencies around the world to help their investigations and help them understand our business.”
For their part, authorities have stepped up regulation of cryptocurrencies as the industry’s market capitalization climbed above $1 trillionfor the first time. In the U.S., the Office of the Comptroller of Currency said this month that federally regulated banks can use stablecoins for payments and other services. U.K. officials released a paper and request for commentary on the use of stablecoins in finance.
Kevin Lehtiniitty, chief strategy officer of Prime Trust, a Nevada-based trust company that has worked extensively with stablecoins, told Cawrey he thinks officials might be planning a framework around stablecoins backed by the regulated banking system – in an effort to weed out possible systemic risks. For now, he says, most cryptocurrency traders are probably just ignoring those risks.
“What are the odds that it’s going to crash in the next few hours that I’m holding?” Lehtiniitty said. ”And that’s that is the world’s dumbest excuse. But I hear it time and time again from over-the-counter and trading partners, other folks, and it drives me nuts.”
Read More: Questions About Tether Just Won’t Go Away. Does the Crypto Market Care?
Bitcoin Watch
Bitcoin is locked in the $30,000 to $35,000 range for the fifth straight day in a sign of caution ahead of the the Federal Reserve meeting, which could inject volatility into financial markets.
The Fed is expected to leave the interest rate unchanged near zero and maintain its liquidity-boosting bond-buying plan at around $120 billion/month. The status quo decision is unlikely to elicit a reaction from bitcoin and markets in general.
However, if Fed’s chairman Powell drops hints of an early tapering (gradual unwinding) of stimulus programs, stocks could drop and the safe-haven dollar would likely draw bids, pushing bitcoin lower.
“BTC may face selling pressure if Powell signals an early taper,” Darius Sit, co-founder and managing partner at the Singapore-based QCP Capital, told CoinDesk.
The Fed has made it clear since August that it intends to keep interest rates low for some time even after inflation climbs above 2%. According to FXStreet’s Yohay Elam, Powell may indirectly signal a willingness to buy more bonds by calling for increased fiscal (government) spending, in which case liquidity plays like bitcoin and gold would shine. President Joe Biden is pushing for a $1.9 trillion stimulus package, and the government might have to rely on the Fed for at least part of the extra funding, as noted by Elam.
Read More: Bitcoin Drops, Dollar Bounces Ahead of Federal Reserve Rate Announcement
What’s Hot
Bitmain Co-Founder Jihan Wu’s exit resolves years-long power struggle as mining firm preps IPO (CoinDesk)
Genesis Capital’s active outstanding loans surge by 81% during 4Q 2020 to $3.8B (CoinDesk) (EDITOR’S NOTE: Genesis is a unit of Digital Currency Group, the owner of CoinDesk)
Silver Lake’s Glenn Hutchins (until recently a New York Fed board member) says it’s “fundamentally wrong to say that Bitcoin is most used for crime” (Finextra)
Social networks turn to blockchain technology amid concerns over power wielded by centralized tech giants like Facebook, Google and Twitter (NYT)
Bitcoin is an incredibly dirty business, with a carbon footprint comparable to New Zealand’s (Bloomberg Opinion)
Bitcoin locked in DeFi protcols tops 40K, potentially showing traders rotating into altcoins in pursuit of juicier opportunities (CoinDesk)
ARK’s Cathie Wood says bitcoin ETF approval unlikely until market cap rises to about $2T (CoinDesk)
Ethereum’s hard fork isn’t really a hard fork in the traditional sense (CoinDesk’s Valid Points newsletter)
Former Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein says in interview re bitcoin: “If I were a regulator I would be kind of hyperventilating at the success of it at the moment, and I’d be arming myself to deal with it” (CNBC via Twitter)
DeFi trading platform dYdX gets $10M funding round from investors including Three Arrows, DeFiance Capital, Andreesen Horowitz, Polychain Capital and Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam (CoinDesk)
Colombia, Estonia upload Bitcoin white paper to their governmental websites (CoinDesk)
“Price bubbles accelerate the growth of the bitcoin user base, the expectation of which then fuels the price bubble,” writes University of Southern California marketing professor in op-ed (CoinDesk Opinion)
Thomas Friedman writes that money-printing to service U.S. government debt “could threaten the status of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency” (NYT Opinion)
Analogs
The latest on the economy and traditional finance
Retail traders are piling into viral options calls at all-time high levels, with massive buying of bullish contracts helping to fuel GameStop price pump (Bloomberg)
China’s asset-bubble warning – and $12B drained from financial system on Tuesday via open-market operations – threatens stock frenzy in Hong Kong (Bloomberg)
Blank-check companies are the talk of Reddit and TikTok as retail investors pour money into SPACs (Bloomberg Businessweek)
Renewed demand for Treasurys quells fears of rising rates (WSJ)
Amid aviation-industry crisis, world’s biggest jet-leasing companies have issued $15B in bonds this month at yields from 2% to 3%, versus about 5% last summer (WSJ)
Consumer confidence in U.S. improves more than expected on outlook for economy (Bloomberg)
IMF estimates that close to 90M people are likely to fall below the extreme poverty threshold during 2020-21, with the pandemic wiping out some $22T in projected output through 2025 (Reuters)
Wall Street shrugs at Washington’s debt pileup (Politico)
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