Bitcoin, Ether rise; Toncoin leads crypto rebound

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Bitcoin rose on Tuesday morning in Asia to around US$26,700, after briefly breaching the US$27,000 resistance level on Monday evening. Ether also logged gains but remained below US$1,650. Most other top 10 non-stablecoin cryptocurrencies moved higher in the past 24 hours, with Toncoin leading the winners with a jump of more than 5%. The rally coincided with a rebound in crypto trading activities and expectations that the Federal Reserve will pause its interest rate hikes this week. U.S. stock futures traded flat after Wall Street closed near the flatline on Monday.

Bitcoin breached US$27,000 for the first time in September

Bitcoin rose 1.11% in the last 24 hours to US$26,778.93 as of 07:30 a.m. in Hong Kong and added 6.62% for the week, according to CoinMarketCap data. The world’s largest cryptocurrency surged on Monday evening to reach US$27,414.73 — the highest price since August 31, but soon retreated to below US$27,000.

The sudden rally in Bitcoin caught some investors off-guard, who had liquidated over US$44 million in Bitcoin positions in the past 24 hours, with over US$31 million of them in short positions, according to Coinglass data.

“Market activity seems to be growing again, after an abrupt decrease during summer months,” Matteo Greco, research analyst at Canada-based digital asset investment firm Fineqia International, said in an emailed note.

The cumulative daily volume on centralized exchanges from Sept. 10 to Sept. 17 reached US$11.3 billion, marking a 19% increase from the 7 days before, noted Greco.

“With the end of summer and the resumption of normal trading activity, the market is likely to see increased volatility again, after BTC reached the minimum volatility levels ever recorded on a 30-day basis during the first two weeks of August,” Greco said.

Along with Bitcoin, Ether rose 1.20% to US$1,638.41 and moved up 5.90% for the week. The second top cryptocurrency reached US$1,667.93 on Monday evening, which was also the highest price since August 31.

“Beyond the macro tilt that left risk assets little changed, yesterday, it seems that BTC and ETH continue to outperform relative to altcoins,” said Justin d’Anethan, head of Asia-Pacific business development at Belgium-based crypto market maker Keyrock.

On the regulatory front in the U.S., the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) on Monday proposed an updated guideline for crypto exchanges, which includes more strict rules on listing and delisting cryptocurrencies, cutting the list of pre-approved cryptos from two dozen to only Bitcoin and Ether as well as six stablecoins.