Bitcoin Tops $23,000 in Bet on Post-Fed Thawing of Crypto Winter
2022.07.28 16:45
© Bloomberg. A bitcoin logo in the window of the Conexus Crypto currency exchange office in Tbilisi, Georgia, on Monday, July 25, 2022. A buzz is building in crypto-investor circles and on Twitter about Bitcoin’s stealth July rally, which has beleaguered investors starting to ponder whether the largest digital asset has found a bottom. Photographer: Valeria Mongelli/Bloomberg
(Bloomberg) — The prospect of a less pugnacious Federal Reserve is encouraging bets that the crypto winter is closer to thawing.
Bitcoin rose as much as 2.9% on Thursday in Asia after a near-9% jump a day earlier, when the Fed raised rates by 75 basis points for a second month but signaled the pace of tightening will, in time, slow down.
The largest token was trading at $23,090 as of 1:25 p.m. in Singapore. So-called altcoins made bigger gains: Ether rose as much as 4.7% and Polkadot 9.3%.
Swaps tied to Fed meeting dates indicate markets anticipate a peak in borrowing costs around year-end and rate cuts in 2023 — which would be a friendlier backdrop for digital assets given they rely on the elixir of liquidity.
“The FOMC decision provided optimism that the end of tightening is in sight and that triggered a nice rally for risky assets that helped elevate cryptos,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst for the Americas at Oanda.
At the same time, similar bouts of post-Fed investor optimism in May and June quickly faded. Plenty of prognosticators remain skeptical the US central bank can ease up materially given inflation is the highest in a generation.
The potential for more blowups among crypto lenders and investors as well as harsher regulatory scrutiny following this year’s rout are among the other risks for virtual coins. Bitcoin has slumped 50% in 2022.
With the next Fed meeting not until September, “there may be some room for upside now,” said Mikkel Mørch, executive director at digital asset investment fund ARK36. But “that will be contingent on the strength of the dollar and the wider macro environment,” he said.
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.