First Mover Asia: Bitcoin Hits 3-Week Low, Lingers Near $21.7K Amid Ongoing Inflation Concerns
CoinDesk · Andriy Onufriyenko

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Good morning. Here’s what’s happening:

Prices: Bitcoin inched down to its lowest level in more than three weeks. It regained some ground to trade at about $21,700.

Insights: Conic Finance aims to offer its users yields as high as 21% on three separate omnipools, which diversifies exposure across the Curve ecosystem. But can it deliver?

Prices

CoinDesk Market Index (CMI)

1,013

−25.2 2.4%

Bitcoin (BTC)

$21,734

−496.0 2.2%

Ethereum (ETH)

$1,536

−30.7 2.0%

S&P 500

3,992.01

+5.6 0.1%

Gold

$1,819

+5.3 0.3%

Nikkei 225

28,444.19

+135.0 0.5%

BTC/ETH prices per CoinDesk Indices, as of 7 a.m. ET (11 a.m. UTC)

Bitcoin Falls to Lowest Level in Nearly a Month.

Good morning, Asia. Here's what's happening in markets.

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell talked tough for a second consecutive day. Banking giant JPMorgan ended its relationship with crypto exchange Gemini, as CoinDesk's Ian Allison first reported. Crypto-friendly bank Silvergate will shutter operations.

Bitcoin absorbed it all and then inched downward to its lowest level in nearly a month. The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization was recently trading at about $21,750, down more than 2% over the past 24 hours. BTC sank below $21,600 at one point after largely teetering over $22,000 for much of this month. Investors have been wrestling with worrisome jobs and price data that has prompted Powell and Fed governors to rekindle their monetary aggressiveness as an inflation prescription.

The prospect of a 50 basis point (bps) interest rate hike now rests about 70% after various indicators heavily favored a more dovish 25 bps increase in previous weeks.

“After celebrating disinflation greenshoots the past two months, the Federal Reserve has had to restart its hawkish positioning by talking tough on rate hikes," Quinn Thompson, head of growth and capital markets at blockchain-powered capital markets platform Maple, wrote CoinDesk in an email. "I think it's interesting to note that [the Fed] were parading their hikes as having a substantial impact on inflation, and then it became clear that inflation has proved to be more stubborn than had been anticipated. A 50-basis-point rate hike is basically inevitable now."

Thompson added that "barring any breakage in the system, such as a credit event of some sort, it seems increasingly likely that there won’t be any rate cuts until next year."

Ether fared similarly to bitcoin and was also down about 2% to change hands just above $1,530. That level was well off its late February highs over $1,700. Other major cryptos were mostly in the red, with SOL, the token of the Solana, blockchain off more than 9% and APT, the native cryptocurrency of layer 1 blockchain Aptos Labs down over 6%. The CoinDesk Market Index, a measure of the broader crypto market's performance, was down nearly 3%.