First Mover Asia: M&A Bankers See Crisis as Opportunity, With Celsius and Inflation in Focus

In This Article:

Good morning. Here’s what’s happening:

Prices: Bitcoin's price clawed back above $20K despite a hot U.S. inflation reading. "Meh," said one analyst.

Insights: Interest in mergers and acquisitions within the crypto sector is gaining traction amid a bear market and falling venture capital interest, Shaurya Malwa reports.

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Prices

Bitcoin (BTC): $19,904 +2.6%

Ether (ETH): $1,090 +4.3%

S&P 500 daily close: 3,801.78 −0.4%

Gold: $1,733 per troy ounce +0.5%

Ten-year Treasury yield daily close: 2.90% −0.05


Bitcoin, ether and gold prices are taken at approximately 4pm New York time. Bitcoin is the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index (XBX); Ether is the CoinDesk Ether Price Index (ETX); Gold is the COMEX spot price. Information about CoinDesk Indices can be found at coindesk.com/indices.


Bitcoin (BTC) was higher, gaining for the first time in six days and clawing back over $20,000.

The expectation going into Wednesday was that a high U.S. inflation reading for June would push the Federal Reserve to get more aggressive in tightening monetary conditions to slow the consumer-price increases – and that in turn would put negative pressure on prices for risky assets, from stocks to bitcoin.

U.S. stocks ended the session lower, so bitcoin's rise prompted some head-scratching from crypto analysts.

"Normally, this is bad news for the economy and the markets," wrote Alexandre Lores, director of blockchain markets research at Quantum Economics, wrote in a newsletter. "Whether it's just another piece of bad economic data thrown onto the pile, or whether this was already priced in, so far investors are meh about it."

In digital asset markets, Polygon's MATIC token was up 11% after Polygon was selected as one of six companies to join Disney's Accelerator program.

And crypto analysts were gawking at an obscure market metric known as the "stETH discount" – possibly a sign troubled crypto lender Celsius Network might be getting ready to dump some or all of its $435 million stash of staked ether (stETH) tokens. Krisztian Sandor had that story, as well as another exclusive based on blockchain data showing Celsius paying off its final installment of loans to decentralized finance protocols – in this case a $50 million loan to Compound.

(Just before press time, CNBC reported that Celsius's lawyers were notifying state regulators that it had started Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings. Celsius didn't immediately respond to an email from CoinDesk requesting comment.)