(Bloomberg) -- Bitcoin traded around the $100,000 level, supported by further signs that proponents of the cryptocurrency sector will help to shape US financial regulations under President-elect Donald Trump.
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Bitcoin changed hands at $101,000 as of 10:49 a.m. on Thursday in Singapore, holding most of a nearly 5% gain from a day earlier that ranked as the biggest in two weeks. Smaller tokens moved in relatively tight ranges.
Trump’s push to undo a Biden administration crypto crackdown in favor of looser regulations helped lift Bitcoin to an all-time peak of $103,800 on Dec. 5. The cryptocurrency has since blipped around the six-figure level.
Firming expectations for a reduction in interest rates by the Federal Reserve aided investor sentiment on Wednesday. Speculators boosted bets on a cut after US consumer-price inflation met forecasts. The prospect of looser monetary conditions sent the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 stock index to a record high.
“The market likes seeing inflation come in within expectations,” said Henry Elder, a principal at UTXO Management, adding that traders are “trying to figure out if $100,000 is a ceiling or a floor.”
Aside from supportive regulations, Trump has also backed the idea of a strategic national Bitcoin stockpile, though many question the feasibility of the latter idea. The president-elect’s son Eric Trump said on Bloomberg Television that his father is “going to be an unbelievable ally to the industry.”
Donald Trump used to be a digital-asset skeptic but pivoted as the industry spent big on promoting its interests during US election campaigning. The Republican now has his own projects in crypto, a controversial sector with a history of volatility, fraud and criminal activity.
Market leader Bitcoin is up roughly 50% since Trump’s victory in the US election on Nov. 5, aided by a net inflow of about $11 billion into US spot-Bitcoin exchange-traded funds over the period. Equivalent products for Ether, the second-largest digital asset, have attracted $2.4 billion.