Tag Archives: Bitcoin USD

‘Bedazzled by money’: Democratic ties to Sam Bankman-Fried under scrutiny after FTX collapse

Sam Bankman-Fried’s fall from grace has dealt an unprecedented blow to the crypto industry’s reputation — and some of this infamy may rub off on politicians who took his money, as well as on former regulators and Capitol Hill staffers who took well-paying jobs representing digital-asset companies before Congress.

Bankman-Fried, founder and CEO of the crumbling cryptocurrency exchange FTX, was one of the most generous donors to political causes during the 2022 election cycle, doling out $40 million, mostly to Democrats, with a particular focus on buoying crypto-friendly politicians in Democratic primaries.

FTX, like many other crypto firms, also aggressively recruited former federal regulators and Capitol Hill staffers, an often-criticized practice but one that has been common in the financial-services industry for decades.

Jeff Hauser, director of the left-leaning Revolving Door Project, said that Democratic politicians who worked closely with Bankman-Fried will have much to explain to the progressive wing of the party.

“A lot of people in the Democratic party got really close to Sam Bankman-Fried, and it reflects very badly on people who took this guy seriously,” he said. “People who in their past lives have taken on corporate power have been bedazzled by money seemingly being thrown their way.”

Bankman-Fried was the primary funder of the Protect Our Future PAC, which spent tens of millions of dollars in Democratic primaries this year. He also floated the idea of spending upwards of $1 billion in the 2024 presidential election to beat Donald Trump if he were the Republican nominee.

Promises of money on this scale likely tantalized many Democratic politicians, Hauser said, whether or not Bankman-Fried ever planned to go through with those contributions.

The crypto industry has also wielded influence by hiring former Capitol Hill staff and federal financial regulators to lobby and advise them on regulatory matters. The Campaign for Accountability, a nonpartisan anticorruption watchdog, published a report in February that found 240 examples of officials with key positions in the White House, Congress, federal regulatory agencies and national political campaigns moving into and out of the industry.

“The crypto industry is following the standard playbook for advancing special interests in Washington, including using all the levers of the influence industry,” Dennis Kelleher, president and CEO of the nonpartisan financial-reform organization Better Markets, told MarketWatch. “One of the most pernicious parts of that is the revolving door, where former officials essentially sell out their public service by using their access and influence on behalf of their private clients.”

Kelleher praised the performance of federal banking and securities regulators who have succeeded in keeping the carnage in the crypto markets segregated from the traditional financial system as popular tokens like bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-1.14%
and ether
ETHUSD,
-1.61%
lost more than 70% of their value over the past year.

Nevertheless, he believes crypto’s influence campaign has convinced lawmakers that what’s needed is to pass legislation that would tailor the financial-regulatory apparatus to be more friendly to the business models of digital-asset companies, rather than increasing funding for market regulators to enforce the regulations already on the books.

A bill put forward in June by Republican Sen. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming and Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York would do just that, granting regulatory authority for the most popular cryptocurrencies to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which critics of the bill say is more crypto-friendly than the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Another bipartisan bill from Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, a Democrat, and Sen. John Bozeman of Arkansas, the committee’s ranking Republican, envisions a similar setup.

Kelleher said that these bills are the product of the crypto industry’s intense lobbying efforts, and without that push, lawmakers might see that what is needed is more funding to enforce securities laws that already exist.

“People need to realize that the crypto industry is basically lawless,” Kelleher said, adding that exchanges like FTX could have made the decision to register as a securities exchange with the SEC, whose supervision would have ensured that the company couldn’t engage in the type of activities that led to its downfall.

“The industry made the conscious decision to not comply with the law, to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on public officials to get a special law passed so they get special treatment,” he said.

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U.S. stocks push higher as Powell sees path back to 2% inflation while sustaining strong labor market

U.S. stock indexes pushed higher after a wobbly start Wednesday, leaving Wall Street potentially on to gain ground after back-to-back losses, as investors tune in to remarks by central bankers while fretting that soaring inflation is damaging the world’s biggest economy.

How are stock indexes trading?
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.12%
     was up 196 points, or 0.6%, at 31,143.
  • The S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.23%
     traded up 15 points, or 0.4%, at 3,836.
  • The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.43%
    gained 42 points, or 0.4%, to 11,223.

On Tuesday, the Dow fell 491.27 points, or 1.6%. The S&P 500 fell 2% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 3%. All three booked their worst daily percentage declines since June 16, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

What’s driving markets?

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday at a European Central Bank forum on central banking that he sees a path back to 2% inflation while sustaining strong labor market, but warned there was “no guarantee that we can do that.”

Investors were also listening to remarks from European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, Bank of England Gov. Andrew Bailey and Augustin Carstens, head of Bank for International Settlements, to speak at speak at the same conference.

On U.S. economic data, the first-quarter GDP was revised to show an 1.6% decline, compared with the prior 1.5% drop.

Equities were limping toward the end of a miserable first half of the year. The S&P 500 is down 19.6% so far in 2022, hit by concerns that inflation rates at multidecade highs are badly damaging household sentiment and that the Federal Reserve’s response to surging prices may tip the economy into recession.

Read: What’s next for the stock market after the worst 1st half since 1970? Here’s the history.

On Tuesday, the Conference Board’s consumer-confidence index dropped in June to a 16-month low of 98.7, with consumers’ outlook on the state of the economy at the most cautious in nearly 10 years. The news helped turn early gains for Wall Steet into heavy losses, with the Nasdaq Composite shedding 3%, leaving the tech-heavy index nursing a loss of 28% for the year to date.

“Last week, U.S. equity markets rallied on the back of the arcane logic that a U.S. recession would mean a lower terminal Fed funds rates and thus, was bullish for stocks… That premise was boosted by weak Michigan Consumer Sentiment data,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at OANDA, in a note to clients.

See: Wall Street’s favorite stock sector has potential upside of 43% as we enter the second half of 2022

On Tuesday, “even weaker U.S. Conference Board Consumer Confidence data provoked the opposite reaction, with U.S. stocks plummeting,” he added.

Wall Steet’s dive left Asian and European bourses floundering. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng
HSI,
-1.88%
fell 2% and the Nikkei 225
NIK,
-0.91%
in Japan slipped 0.9%. China’s Shanghai Composite
SHCOMP,
-1.40%
shed 1.4% after President Xi Jinping reiterated that the regime’s strict COVID-19 policy was “correct and effective.”

The comments added to worries that supply constraints in China could exacerbate global inflationary pressures. And such concerns were illustrated in Spain on Wednesday, where data showed prices rising by 10.2% in June, their fastest pace in 37 years. Europe’s Stoxx 600
SXXP,
-0.41%
fell 0.8%.

Oil prices crept higher, with WTI crude
CL.1,
+1.61%,
up 1.5% to $113.41 a barrel.

The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.135%
eased 1.3 basis points to 3.167%.

Companies in focus
  • Shares of Pinterest Inc.
    PINS,
    -2.36%
    rose 0.2% after the social-media company said co-founder Ben Silbermann is stepping down as chief executive and is being replaced by an e-commerce executive from Google.
  • Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.
    BBBY,
    -22.21%
    shares fell 18.7% after it announced disappointing fiscal first-quarter results and the ouster of its chief executive, Mark Tritton.
  • General Mills Inc.
    GIS,
    +5.31%
    shares rose 4.7% after beating quarterly expectations. The company posted fourth-quarter net income of $822.8 million, or $1.35 per share, nearly double $416.8 million, or 68 cents per share, last year. Adjusted EPS of $1.12, ahead of the FactSet consensus for $1.01 per share. 
Other assets
  • The ICE U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    +0.30%
     edged down 0.01%.
  • Bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    -1.04%
     fell 4.6% to trade near $20,120.
  • August gold futures
    GCQ22,
    -0.12%
    gained $6.30, or 0.4%, to settle at $1,827.90 an ounce.

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U.S. stocks struggle for direction as opening gains fizzle despite strong durables data

U.S. stocks struggled for direction Monday afternoon, trading near unchanged, as investors weighed stronger-than-expected data on durable-goods orders against expectations for a slowing economy that could limit the magnitude of Federal Reserve rate increases.

What’s happening
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.09%
    was almost unchanged at 31,503.
  • The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.01%
    was down 4 points, or 0.1%, at 3,907.
  • The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.35%
    shed 71 points, or 0.6%, at 11,537.

Last week, the S&P 500 jumped 6% to snap a three-week losing run. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 5% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite gained 7%.

What’s driving markets

Stocks struggled to hang on to gains after data showed U.S. durable-goods orders rose by 0.7% in May, versus forecasts for a 0.2% rise, and pending home sales rebounded last month, reversing a six-month decline. Investors were caught between recession and inflation fears.

“Stocks can’t win right now, either the economic data softens and the economy is much weaker than we thought or robust readings pave the way for the Fed to be more aggressive with their inflation fight,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, in a note.

Stocks had bounced last week in a move analysts credited to expectations a slowing economy could see the Federal Reserve hike rates less aggressively than previously expected. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell warned lawmakers that achieving a so-called soft landing for the economy as the Fed tightens interest rates would be “very challenging.”

JPMorgan quantitative strategist Marko Kolanovic published a note saying the market could rise 7% this week, due to the need for portfolios to rebalance as the month, quarter and first-half closes. That effect already played out near the end of the first quarter, and near the end of May.

“The S&P 500 is nearly 8% up from its lows at the start of the month and rallied 3% on Friday,” according to analysts at ING, in a Monday note. “Helping the rally has no doubt been last week’s repricing of tightening cycles around the world where 25-50 basis points of expected tightening were removed from some money market curves in just a few days. Driving that pricing seemed to be the much broader discussion — including from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell — over the risks of recession.”

Strategists at Credit Suisse say bond yields may have seen their peak, particularly for Treasury-inflation protected securities, which in turn means the dollar
DXY,
-0.34%
 is close to its summit. They say their lead indicators are consistent with 0% GDP growth, as evidenced by the collapse in housing affordability, the weakness of corporate confidence and the weakness in the employment gauge of the Institute for Supply Management manufacturing index.

Group of Seven economic powers are meeting in Germany where they expect to announce an agreement on a price cap on Russian oil.

Companies in focus
  • Frontier Airlines parent Frontier Group Holdings Inc.
    ULCC,
    -11.01%
    issued a letter to Spirit Airlines Inc.
    SAVE,
    -7.55%
    shareholders, urging them to support the air carriers’ agreed upon merger deal. In the letter, Frontier Chairman William Franke and Chief Executive Barry Biffle said the recently amended Frontier-Spirit deal offers Spirit shareholders value “well in excess” of JetBlue Airways Corp.’s
    JBLU,
    +1.86%
    “illusory proposal, which lacks any realistic likelihood of obtaining regulatory approval.” Frontier shares fell more than10%, while Spirit shares dropped 8% and JetBlue shares gained 1.3%.
Other assets
  • The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.186%
    rose 4 basis points to 3.166%. Yields and debt prices move opposite each other.
  • The ICE U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    -0.34%
    edged down 0.4%.
  • Bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    -3.09%
    fell 3.4% to trade near $20,675.
  • Oil futures traded higher in choppy trade, with the U.S. benchmark
    CL.1,
    +2.24%
    up 1.3% near $109.04 a barrel. Gold
    GC00,
    -0.21%
    was off 0.2% below $1,827 an ounce.
  • The Stoxx Europe 600
    SXXP,
    +0.52%
    finished 0.5% higher, while London’s FTSE 100
    UKX,
    +0.69%
    gained 0.7%.
  • The Shanghai Composite
    SHCOMP,
    +0.88%
    ended 0.9% higher, while the Hang Seng Index
    HSI,
    +2.35%
    jumped 2.4% and Japan’s Nikkei 225
    NIK,
    +1.43%
    rose 1.4%.

— Steve Goldstein contributed to this article.

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Tom DeMark identified the bitcoin downside in March. Here’s the good and bad news the technical strategist now has for the cryptocurrency.

Technical strategist Tom DeMark in March said bitcoin could fall as low as $18,418 — back when the cryptocurrency was trading as high as $48,000.

A volatile weekend had bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-1.21%
briefly trading below $18,000, as it traded around $20,000 on Monday, down some 70% from its Nov. 10 peak of $68,924. Bitcoin has collapsed in value as the Federal Reserve began lifting interest rates.

DeMark’s indicators place great importance on the number of days, which don’t have to be consecutive, in which there was a close lower than the close two days ago. Subject to various conditions, when the countdown reaches 13, a buy signal is triggered. (The opposite applies to sell signals.) Put more simply, his analysis looks for both overbought and oversold signals.

Tom DeMark says his indicators have spotted bitcoin tops and bottoms.

In an analysis provided exclusively to MarketWatch, DeMark says lasting damage has been done because bitcoin has fallen more than 50% from its peak. In prior declines, bitcoin held the 50% retracement levels.

See earlier story: The technician who called the 2020 market bottom says a ‘shocking rally’ is in store

“Typically, structural long term damage is done to an uptrend when a retracement exceeds 56%,” says DeMark, the founder and CEO of DeMark Analytics and a consultant to hedge-fund manager Steven A. Cohen. “Such breakdowns bespeak a high probability recovery to the all-time bitcoin highs will require many years, if not decades, to accomplish.”

As a comparison, it took 25 years for stocks to exceed the prior September 1929 high.

But like the stock market after 1929, there could be a rally. “This does not negate the prospect of up to 50-56% recovery over upcoming months which implies bitcoin rally back to $40,000-$45,000.”

Some good news may be in store for bitcoin investors.

Depending on which timing model is applied, bitcoin recorded buy countdown 12 or 13 on Saturday morning. “Since this was accomplished over a weekend and a 7 day chart there remains modest risk of two lower lows and closes than Saturday levels next week. Regardless once there is a close above the close 4 days prior followed the next trading day with a higher high and close, the trend should reverse upside,” he says.

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Crypto lending platform Celsius pauses withdrawals amid ‘extreme market conditions’

Crypto lending platform Celsius Networks LLC said Sunday it is pausing all withdrawals, swaps and transfers between accounts, “due to extreme market conditions.”

“We are taking this action today to put Celsius in a better position to honor, over time, its withdrawal obligations,” the New Jersey-based company said in a statement.

Celsius is one of the largest crypto lending companies in the world, at one point claiming more than $20 billion in assets. But it has also run afoul of regulators, and some users have recently blamed Celsius for steep financial losses for encouraging them to hold its CEL digital tokens as collateral for loans — CEL plunged 48% late Sunday and has lost more than 75% of its value over the past month, and 97% over the past year, according to CoinGecko data.

From May: Celsius faces a revolt as a high-yield crypto plummets

The wider cryptocurrency space has been slammed this year, with the total crypto market down more than 40% over the past two months. Bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-5.39%,
for example, slid to an 18-month low Sunday and has lost 45% of its value year to date; it’s off more than 60% since its all-time high-water mark last November.

“We understand that this news is difficult,” Celsius said Sunday. “We are working with a singular focus: to protect and preserve assets to meet our obligations to customers.”

Celsius said its operations were continuing, but that there was “a lot of work ahead  as we consider various options.”

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U.S. stock futures fall amid Ukraine invasion jitters, despite late rally on Wall Street

U.S. stock-index futures fell in volatile trading Thursday night, following a late rally that sent stocks closing higher during the regular trading session despite market jitters caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
YM00,
-0.47%
were down about 130 points at midnight Eastern, while S&P 500 futures
ES00,
-0.60%
and Nasdaq-100 futures
NQ00,
-0.83%
also declined.

For more: Complete MarketWatch coverage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Crude prices continued to rise after rising above $100 a barrel during intraday trading for the first time since 2014. West Texas Intermediate crude for April delivery
CLV22,
+1.39%
was last at about $95 a barrel, while April Brent crude
BRNJ22,
+1.82%,
the global benchmark, was at $101 a barrel.

Gold prices
GC00,
-0.47%
slipped, last trading at about $1,913 an ounce, while cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin
BTCUSD,
+0.94%
and ethereum
ETHUSD,
-0.02%
were fairly stable.

Earlier in the day, the Dow
DJIA,
+0.28%
snapped a five-session losing streak, closing up 92.07 points, or 0.3%, at 33,223.83, after falling as far as 2.6% in morning trading. The S&P 500
SPX,
+1.50%
 climbed 63.2 points, or 1.5%, finishing at 4,288.70, but in correction territory, while the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+3.34%
 rose 436.1 points, or 3.3%, ending at 13,473.59, but bouncing off a session low at 12,587.88.

Read: Nasdaq Composite turns a 3.5% loss into 3.3% gain as stock market stages epic turnaround after Russia invaded Ukraine. Here are 3 reasons for the rebound.

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What to expect from markets in the next six weeks, before the Federal Reserve revamps its easy-money stance

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell fired a warning shot across Wall Street last week, telling investors the time has come for financial markets to stand on their own feet, while he works to tame inflation.

The policy update last Wednesday laid the ground work for the first benchmark interest rate hike since 2018, probably in mid-March, and the eventual end of the central bank’s easy-money stance two years since the onset of the pandemic.

The problem is that the Fed strategy also gave investors about six weeks to brood over how sharply interest rates could climb in 2022, and how dramatically its balance sheet might shrink, as the Fed pulls levers to cool inflation which is at levels last seen in the early 1980s.

Instead of soothing market jitters, the wait-and-see approach has Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” the Cboe Volatility Index
VIX,
-9.28%,
up a record 73% in the first 19 trading days of the year, according to Dow Jones Market Data Average, based on all available data going back to 1990.

“What investors don’t like is uncertainty,” said Jason Draho, head of asset allocation Americas at UBS Global Wealth Management, in a phone interview, pointing to a selloff that’s left few corners of financial markets unscathed in January.

Even with a sharp rally late Friday, the interest rate-sensitive Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
+3.13%
remained in correction territory, defined as a fall of at least 10% from its most recent record close. Worse, the Russell 2000 index of small-capitalization stocks
RUT,
+1.93%
is in a bear market, down at least 20% from its Nov. 8 peak.

“Valuations across all asset classes were stretched,” said John McClain, portfolio manager for high yield and corporate credit strategies at Brandywine Global Investment Management. “That’s why there has been nowhere to hide.”

McClain pointed to negative performance nipping away at U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds
LQD,
+0.11%,
their high-yield
HYG,
+0.28%
counterparts and fixed-income
AGG,
+0.07%
generally to begin the year, but also the deeper rout in growth and value stocks, and losses in international
EEM,
+0.49%
investments.

“Every one is in the red.”

Wait-and-see

Powell said Wednesday the central bank “is of a mind” to raise interest rates in March. Decisions on how to significantly reduce its near $9 trillion balance sheet will come later, and hinge on economic data.

“We believe that by April, we are going to start to see a rollover on inflation,” McClain said by phone, pointing to base effects, or price distortions common during the pandemic that make yearly comparison tricky. “That will provide ground cover for the Fed to take a data-dependent approach.”

“But from now until then, it’s going to be a lot of volatility.”

‘Peak panic’ about hikes

Because Powell didn’t outright reject the idea of hiking rates in 50-basis-point increments, or a series of increases at successive meetings, Wall Street has skewed toward pricing in a more aggressive monetary policy path than many expected only a few weeks ago.

The CME Group’s FedWatch Tool on Friday put a near 33% chance on the fed-funds rate target climbing to the 1.25% to 1.50% range by the Fed’s December meeting, through the ultimate path above near- zero isn’t set in stone.

Read: Fed seen as hiking interest rates seven times in 2022, or once at every meeting, BofA says

“It’s a bidding war for who can predict the most rate hikes,” Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at Schwab Center for Financial Research, told MarketWatch. “I think we are reaching peak panic about Fed rate hikes.”

“We have three rate hikes penciled in, then it depends on how quickly they decide to use the balance sheet to tighten,” Jones said. The Schwab team pegged July as a starting point for a roughly $500 billion yearly draw down of the Fed’s holdings in 2022, with a $1 trillion reduction an outside possibility.

“There’s a lot of short-term paper on the Fed’s balance sheet, so they could roll off a lot really quickly, if they wanted to,” Jones said.

Time to play safe?

“You have the largest provider of liquidity to markets letting up on the gas, and quickly moving to tapping the brakes. Why increase risk right now?”


— Dominic Nolan, chief executive officer at Pacific Asset Management

It’s easy to see why some beaten down assets finally might end up on shopping lists. Although, tighter policy hasn’t even fully kicked in, some sectors that ascended to dizzying heights helped by extreme Fed support during the pandemic haven’t been holding up well.

“It has to run its course,” Jones said, noting that it often takes “ringing out the last pockets” of froth before markets find the bottom.

Cryptocurrencies
BTCUSD,
-0.78%
have been a notable casualty in January, along with giddiness around “blank-check,” or special-purpose acquisition corporations (SPACs), with at least three planned IPOs shelved this week.

“You have the largest provider of liquidity to markets letting up on the gas, and quickly moving to tapping the brakes,” said Dominic Nolan, chief executive officer at Pacific Asset Management. “Why increase risk right now?”

Once the Fed is able to provide investors will a more clear road map of tightening, markets should be able to digest constructively relative to today, he said, adding that the 10-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.771%
remains an important indicator. “If the curve flattens substantially as the Fed raises rates, it could push the Fed to more aggressive [tightening] in an effort to steepen the curve.”

Climbing Treasury yields have pushed rates in the U.S. investment-grade corporate bond market near 3%, and the energy-heavy high-yield component closer to 5%.

“High yield at 5%, to me, that’s better for the world than 4%,” Nolan said, adding that corporate earnings still look strong, even if peak levels in the pandemic have passed, and if economic growth moderates from 40-year highs.

Draho at UBS, like others interviewed for this story, views the risk of a recession in the next 12 months as low. He added that while inflation is at 1980s highs, consumer debt levels also are near 40-year lows. “The consumer is in strong shape, and can handle higher interest rates.”

U.S. economic data to watch Monday is the Chicago PMI, which caps the wild month. February kicks off with the Labor Department’s job openings and quits on Tuesday. Then its ADP private sector employment report and homeownership rate Wednesday, following by the big one Friday: the January jobs report.

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El Salvador’s president adopts McDonald’s uniform for Twitter profile after bitcoin plunge

El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, says Human Rights Watch, has “undermined basic democratic checks and balances” since taking office.

But he seems to have a sense of humor.

Bukele changed his Twitter profile to that of a McDonald’s employee, in wake of the latest plunge in bitcoin that brought the cryptocurrency down as much as 50% from its highs.

That’s a reference to an internet meme, where HODL’ers indicate their future career prospects when bitcoin slumps. McDonald’s pays as low as $11 per hour.

Bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-4.44%
again started to slide early Monday after a turbulent weekend, falling below $34,000. The cryptocurrency is down over 50% from its record high.

Under Bukele’s direction, El Salvador has been buying bitcoin, and uniquely has adopted it as legal tender. Coindesk reports the country now holds over 1,500 bitcoin, worth some $53 million in fiat Yankee dollars.

Financial markets have not been impressed. Since El Salvador adopted bitcoin as legal tender, its 5-year credit default swaps have surged to 1,812.81 , from 412.54, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

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Cathie Wood says stocks have corrected into ‘deep value territory’ and won’t let benchmarks ‘hold our strategies hostage’

ARK Invest founder Cathie Wood offered the latest defense of the once-highflying, disruptive innovation strategies that had made her suite of exchange-traded funds among the most popular, and best-performing, on Wall Street in 2020.

In a Friday evening blog post, Wood said that despite a brutal stretch that has compelled the operators of the ARK Invest ETFs, including the flagship Ark Innovation
ARKK,
+5.80%
fund, to do some soul-searching, the fund manager is sticking to her game plan.

‘With a five-year investment time horizon, our forecasts for these platforms suggest that our strategies today could deliver a 30-40% compound annual rate of return during the next five years.’


— Cathie Wood, ARK Invest founder and CEO, in a Friday blog post

“We won’t let benchmarks and tracking errors hold our strategies hostage to the existing world order,” Wood wrote. She described the success of the ARK ETFs as one not solely bolstered by fervor for “stay at home” investment opportunities, amid the COVID pandemic, but rooted in identifying paradigm-shifting innovation, from blockchain and bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-1.06%
to electric vehicles.

“Critical to investment success will be moving to the right side of change, avoiding industries and companies caught in the crosshairs of ‘creative destruction’ and embracing those on the leading edge of ‘disruptive innovation,’” Wood wrote.

On Friday, ARK Innovation ended the session up nearly 6% and produced its second straight sharp weekly gain, up 1.1%, following a 1.8% advance in the prior week. The advance for ARK Innovation still leaves the actively managed fund down nearly 22% in the year to date, as the broader S&P 500
SPX,
-1.03%,
the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-1.48%
and the technology Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
-0.07%
have faced whipsawing volatility derived primarily from concerns about more transmissible strains of COVID, surging inflation and global monetary policy’s reaction to those pricing pressures. Year-to-date the S&P 500 index is up 864.57 points or 23.02%.

ARK’s seven ETFs returned an average of 141% in 2020, on the back of gains from companies such as Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
+0.61%,
 and Teladoc Health Inc.
TDOC,
+11.83%,
 making Wood the toast of Wall Street. But those funds, focused primarily on companies that aren’t yet profitable, have been limping lower since hitting a peak back in February, and their woeful performance has raised questions about the prospects for the ETFs in the months and years to come.

Wood urged investors to maintain their support of the ARK complex and said that maintaining a long-term, five-year time horizon would be the best way to judge the fund manager’s true performance.

“With a five-year investment time horizon, our forecasts for these platforms suggest that our strategies today could deliver a 30-40% compound annual rate of return during the next five years,” the ARK CEO wrote.

“In other words, if our research is correct—and I believe that our research on innovation is the best in the financial world—then our strategies will triple to quintuple in value over the next five years,” Wood added.

The ARK founder also made the case that the Nasdaq and S&P 500 could be the bigger disappointment to return-eager investors in the longer-term because they are more overvalued than the disruptive investments that comprise her funds.

“Unlike many innovation-related stocks, equity benchmarks are selling at record high prices and near record high valuations, 26x for the S&P 500 and 127x for the Nasdaq on a trailing twelve-month basis,” Wood wrote.

She said that the “five major innovation platforms which involve 14 technologies are likely to transform the existing world order and that so-called tried and true investment strategies “will disappoint during the next five to ten years as DNA sequencing, robotics, energy storage, artificial intelligence, and blockchain technology scale and converge.”

Wood also made the case that the so-called wall of worry, with inflation fears representing perhaps the biggest concern, provided an ideal backdrop for further advances in innovation stocks in the longer run because the dot-com markets of the late-1990s weren’t properly buffeted by investor concerns. The thinking is that “walls of worry” tend to limit market euphoria.

“In our view, the wall of worry built on the back of high multiple stocks bodes well for equities in the innovation space,” she wrote. “No wall of worry existed or tested the equity market in 1999. This time around, the wall of worry has scaled to enormous heights,” Wood said.

On the macroeconomic front, Wood said that deflation, rather than inflation, could be a bigger problem for markets in the coming months.

“That said, my conviction is growing that the bigger surprise to the markets will be price deflation – both cyclical and secular – and that, after collapsing this year, higher multiple stocks could turn around dramatically during the next year,” she wrote.

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‘A perfect storm’ as bitcoin stages weekend crash that puts it on verge of ‘breakdown.’ Here’s what crypto bulls are saying.

A downturn in global stocks appears to be spilling over into the nascent crypto market, with a bout of weekend selling erupting into a mini-flash crash in prices of bitcoin and other notable digital assets.

At last check Saturday afternoon New York time, bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-21.43%
was changing hands at $48,186.96 on CoinDesk, down 12% over the past 24 hours, but the overnight descent, in the early hours of Saturday morning, had been even more harrowing. Bitcoin’s slump to around $42,000 on some exchanges meant that it had tumbled nearly 30% peak to trough on a 24-hour basis.

NYDIG, a technology and financial services firm dedicated to Bitcoin, said that the decline was even more severe for some offshore platforms such as Huobi, where bitcoin briefly touched a 24-hour nadir at $28,800.

That is a gut-wrenching fall, that may even leave some veteran crypto bulls feeling a touch queasy.

The drop also meant that the total market value of the crypto universe, as tracked by CoinMarketCap.com, shed nearly $400 billion to around $2 trillion, before recovering to around $2.2 trillion.


Source: CoinMarketCap.com

So what precipitated the drop? It isn’t 100% clear.

The analysts at CoinDesk blamed at least some of the downturn on trading in crypto derivatives, amplified by growing concerns about the prospects for tighter financial conditions that is forcing a repricing of assets that are sensitive to potentially rising borrowing costs.

“The decline was likely in part technically-driven, exacerbated by the derivatives market, and not helped by the downside momentum behind high-growth stocks on Friday, to which bitcoin has been positively correlated,” wrote Katie Stockton of Fairlead Strategies, in a Saturday morning note.

NYDIG estimates that $1.1 billion of leveraged bitcoin positions and $2.5 billion of crypto leveraged positions (including bitcoin) have been liquidated in the past 24 hours, representing the largest such notional liquidation since Sept. 7.

Bitcoin ‘s values have been softening for weeks but declines for other risky assets have been accelerating with the Federal Reserve indicating it might increase the pace at which it is withdrawing the market support provided in the past 18 months during the coronavirus pandemic as it turns its attention to restraining inflation. This so-called “tapering” of bond purchases has investors believing that interest-rates hikes are next on the central bank’s agenda in 2022.

Some believe that bitcoin and other digital assets aren’t correlated with the prices of other assets, which has been heralded as one of the more appealing features of bitcoin and its ilk. However, crypto has been trading more in step with traditional stocks and bonds recently partly because of the prevailing low interest-rate environment and if that changes then the values of a host of assets, also factoring in inflation, must be reassessed.

Put another way, the value of an asset is its future income, discounted to the present using interest rates, plus a “risk premium”—the extra return you expect for owning something riskier than a government bond. A rising interest rate diminishes the present value of that future income.

In traditional markets, that repricing has seen technology shares underperform as they are the most sensitive to shifts in rates. The tech-laden Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
-1.92%
stands 6% from its Nov. 19 peak, with declines gathering steam over the past week, amid fears about the economic impact of the coronavirus omicron variant and concerns about the Fed’s monetary policy plans.

Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.17%,
is half way toward a correction, and is off more than 5% from its Nov. 8 record close, and the S&P 500 index
SPX,
-0.84%
is 3.5% from its all-time high close put in on Nov. 18, while the small-capitalization Russell 2000 index fell into correction, commonly defined as a fall of at least 10% from a recent peak, on Thursday.

On Twitter, Michael Novogratz, founder and Chief Executive of crypto firm Galaxy Digital, tweeted that the backdrop in markets was a “perfect storm,” perhaps referring to the tumble in broader markets, omicron fears and hawkish comments from the Federal Reserve.

Fairlead’s Stockton says that if the downturn persists, after bitcoin broke through an area of support at around $53,000, it would qualify as a more troubling technical breakdown of the uptrend in the asset’s price.

“ Momentum has weakened to the extent that there is a pending weekly MACD ‘sell’ signal that would be solidified upon a confirmed breakdown tomorrow, she wrote, referring to the Moving Average Convergence/Divergence, used by technical analysts as a gauge of momentum in an asset.  

However, NYDIG suggested that they are seeing positive trends for bitcoin and crypto: “On our desk, we have seen two-way flows today with 84% of the flows being buys on our trading desk excluding tax loss harvesting trades,” the company wrote in a note on Saturday. 

In other crypto, Ether
ETHUSD,
-16.54%
on the Ethereum blockchain was trading down 6% but holding above $4,000 at 4,050.85, at last check Saturday afternoon. It had been as low as around $3,500 overnight.

To be sure, crypto is one of the more volatile assets and is still in the phase of gaining credibility as a bona fide alternative asset.

Some crypto bulls, known for holding the investment long-term despite its tendency for wild swings, were making light of the Saturday slump such as this tweet from the Twitter account associated with Billy Markus, one of the founders of dogecoin
DOGEUSD,
-33.22%,
which has become such a popular meme asset that it has been duplicated by other tokens such as Shiba Inu
SHIBUSD,
.

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