Bitcoin plunges from $20,000 as rally runs out of steam

Bitcoin went into freefall on Friday, its price collapsing from the dizzying heights of nearly $20,000 earlier this week to around $12,000 as steam appeared to be running out of its year-end rally.

According to Coindesk, the cryptocurrency was trading at $12,137, a fall of 36 per cent in five days. Its price has fallen by over $2,000 in the space of 12 hours.

It comes after a troubled week for Bitcoin, in which a cryptocurrency exchange went bust in South Korea following a cyber attack, knocking its price.

The price of Bitcoin has fallen from $20,000 earlier this week to $12,137 as its rally runs out of steam

Coinbase, another exchange based in the US, also said it was opening an investigation into sharp price increases.

Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX Capital, said: ‘Has the bubble finally popped? It’s hard to see the bell tolling just yet.

‘Large price swings have become so normal that it’s hard to decide – we can easily see this market bounce back in very short order.

‘Whilst there have been some hacks, public infighting in the mining community, lots of rumoured forks and regulatory pressure building on some fronts, this is likely to be a simple bout of risk-off selling as investors rebalance towards year-end.

The fall comes after a troubled week for Bitcoin, in which a cryptocurrency exchange went bust in South Korea following a cyber attack, knocking its price

The fall comes after a troubled week for Bitcoin, in which a cryptocurrency exchange went bust in South Korea following a cyber attack, knocking its price

‘It looks like it’s time to cash in the gains and spend the winnings on a bumper Christmas.’

But it hasn’t all been bad news this week.

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) launched its own bitcoin futures trading on Monday, following in the footsteps of the CBOE exchange.

US regulators approved futures trading in Bitcoin earlier this month and Goldman Sachs is reportedly gearing up to enter the market.

A Bitcoin ATM machine at Olive's Caribbean Restaurant, New Cross, south London. Despite this week's flop the currency is trading well up on the year

A Bitcoin ATM machine at Olive’s Caribbean Restaurant, New Cross, south London. Despite this week’s flop the currency is trading well up on the year

JP Morgan boss Jamie Dimon has branded Bitcoin a ‘fraud’, while Christine Lagarde of the International Monetary Fund said ‘it may not be wise to dismiss virtual currencies’.

The Treasury has announced plans for closer scrutiny of the cryptocurrency as part of EU-wide plans that will require online platforms that trade in Bitcoin to carry out due diligence on customers and report suspicious transactions.

But that has not curbed excitement over its emerging investment opportunities.

Despite its Friday flop, the currency is still well up on the year, rising from around $900 US dollars in January to today’s price.



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