Bitcoin Rebounds From Slump Triggered by Iran's Attack on Israel

18 days ago
Bitcoin

(Bloomberg) -- Bitcoin recovered from the steepest selloff in more than a year, an early indication of impending volatility across asset markets as investors digest the prospects of a military escalation in the Middle East.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Israel Versus Iran — What All-Out War Could Look Like

Texas Warns of Possible Power Emergency Next Week

Iran’s Missile Barrage Was an Error Israel Can Gain From

Israel Grapples With New Phase in its Multi-Front War With Iran

A $150 Billion Fortune Bolsters Qatari Royals at Critical Moment

The largest cryptocurrency rose as much as 5.9% and traded around $64,600 as of 11:40 a.m. in London on Sunday. Smaller coins like Polkadot and Uniswap rallied more than 10%, while Ether advanced 5%.

Iran launched attack drones and missiles against Israel in apparent retaliation for a strike in Syria that killed top Iranian military officers, taking the conflict in the region into a dangerous new phase. With Iran’s action taking place while most markets were closed, crypto traders found themselves in the unusual position of being among the first to react to a major geopolitical event.

Read more: Middle East in Dangerous New Phase After Iran’s Attack on Israel

“More investors than usual might be choosing to express their market views through crypto,” David Lawant, head of research at FalconX.

As Israel braced for an attack, the tension hurt stocks Friday and boosted havens such as bonds and the dollar. Coinglass data show about $1.5 billion of bullish crypto wagers via derivatives were liquidated on Friday and Saturday, one of the heaviest two-day liquidations in at least six months.

Leverage “has gotten completely overwhelmed in the last three days, so that’s caused prices to materially deteriorate” in digital assets, Zaheer Ebtikar, founder of crypto fund Split Capital, said in a phone interview.

Stock markets in the Middle East were mostly in the red on Sunday. Israel equities gave up earlier gains to trade slightly lower as of 8:36 a.m. London time.

Read more: Israel, Allies Mostly Block Unprecedented Attack From Iran

A significant military escalation between Israel and Iran would test the notion that Bitcoin and other cryptoassets offer a haven in times of turmoil, a view often expressed by boosters of the asset class. When Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, cryptocurrencies were in the early days of a market meltdown that lasted until the end of that year.

Bitcoin is down from a mid-March record of $73,798. Demand for dedicated US exchange-traded funds that debuted in January helped the token reach an all-time high but net inflows into the products have moderated lately.

Crypto speculators are awaiting the so-called Bitcoin halving, which will reduce new supply of the token in half and is expected around April 20. Historically, the halving has proved a tailwind for prices, though there are growing doubts about whether a repeat is likely given Bitcoin recently hit a historical peak.

(Updates to add Ether in second paragraph.)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

How a Pioneering Blackjack Master Beats the Odds of Aging

Race for AI Supremacy in Middle East Is Measured in Data Centers

Cocoa’s Surge Is Drawing Africa’s Farmers Back to the Bean

Toyota Pins Its Hopes on Revamped 4Runner to Beat Ford and Hyundai

Everyone Is Rich, No One Is Happy. The Pro Golf Drama Is Back

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Read more
Similar news