First Mover Asia: Bitcoin falls to $19.6k as investors continue to mull Fed chair's comments
|Ether and other major altcoins are down in weekend trading.
Good morning. Here’s what’s happening:
Prices: Bitcoin and ether traded down over the weekend.
Insights: Analysts saw Fed Chair Jerome Powell's speech for what it was: an unbridled commitment to tame inflation.
Prices
Bitcoin Falls Below $20K
After clinging tenaciously to support above $20,000 for much of the weekend, bitcoin fell well below this threshold late Sunday.
The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization was recently trading at $19,600, down more than 2% over the previous 24 hours. Ether, the second largest crypto in market value was recently changing hands at roughly $1,430, down more than 4% as investors continued to chew over U.S. central bank Chair Jerome Powell's vow to continue the monetary hawkishness the Fed adopted earlier this year.
That news disappointed some investors hoping for signs of Fed confidence that its steps the last few months were taming inflation and that it might back away from its recent diet of 75-basis point interest rate hikes.
"The macroeconomic uncertainties continued to weigh on the price of BTC, and while the PCE data came in negative (giving market hopes that the Fed could take a less aggressive stance moving forward), [the] Fed chair's talk on Friday dashed those hopes as he cautioned against premature policy loosening," Joe DiPasquale of crypto asset manager BitBull Capital, wrote to CoinDesk. "The market has reacted negatively to those comments and we're seeing Bitcoin testing the $20,000 support."
Most other major cryptos were recently in the red with AVAX and ATOM down more than 9% and 6%, respectively. XMR rose about a percentage point.
On Friday, bitcoin fell precipitously from the $21,000 perch it held throughout the working week as Powell noted that inflation remains a serious threat. He said that "reducing inflation is likely to require a sustained period of below-trend growth" that would create "softer labor markets," among other impacts.
The ongoing strength of the job market has suggested repeatedly that the economy has not fallen into recession. The 3.5% unemployment rate is the lowest level since February 2020. "While higher interest rates, slower growth and softer labor market conditions will bring down inflation, they will also bring some pain to households and businesses," Powell said.
“We are moving our policy stance purposefully to a level that will be sufficiently restrictive to return inflation to 2%,” Powell also said.
Equities and Crypto News
Cryptos late-week fall tracked equity markets that closed substantially lower on Friday with the tech-focused Nasdaq and S&P 500 plunging nearly 4% and 3.3%, respectively.
In recent crypto industry news :
Japan is preparing to review existing corporate crypto tax rates in an effort to entice startups to remain in the country, local news outlet Yomiuri reported. Japan's financial services agency (FSA) and the ministry of economy, trade and industry are considering a tax reform proposal for 2023 that could exempt crypto startups that issue their own tokens from paying taxes on unrealized gains. And
But over the weekend, CoinDesk reported that Grayscale Investments LLC has been fielding questions from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over the firm’s “securities law analysis” of tokens in some of its less-popular crypto trusts. The inquiry, which Grayscale disclosed in little-noticed filings made in June and mid-August, casts a shadow over the trusts’ viability at a time when the world’s largest digital asset manager is already dealing with a precipitous decline in its assets’ value due to the ongoing crypto winter.
BitBull's DiPasquale wrote that "Monday's opening for equities will be key, as any more downside there could push BTC toward the recent lows."
"We will be watching for the market's reactions to new lows and aiming to accumulate BTC between $20,000 and $15,000," he wrote.
Biggest Gainers
There are no gainers in CoinDesk 20 today.
Biggest Losers
Asset | Ticker | Returns | DACS Sector |
---|---|---|---|
Avalanche | AVAX | −9.5% | Smart Contract Platform |
Cosmos | ATOM | −8.6% | Smart Contract Platform |
Polygon | MATIC | −5.3% | Smart Contract Platform |
Insights
Here's How Fed Observers Viewed Powell's Jackson Hole Speech
Speeches by U.S. central bank chairs receive more scrutiny than any others by public officials except for U.S. Presidential addresses. They also draw some of the strongest reactions by analysts, investors and others whom make a living observing monetary policy and the economy.
Even by these standards, Jerome Powell's remarks at the Fed's Economic Symposium on Friday drew particular attention, coming amid a flood of often confounding indicators economic indicators, including July's decline in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) suggesting that inflation that had reached a 40-year high the previous month was waning. Would Powell be a hawk or signal a softening in interest rate hikes.
In the strongest terms, Powell said that inflation remained a menace to economic well-being and that the Fed would continue raising rates. “We will keep at it until we are confident the job is done,” he said.
Here's how a few commentators from major research and financial services groups Powell's view Powell's comments and the likely future impact of ongoing monetary hawkishness:
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“They won’t want to be remembered as the central bank that missed inflation or even spurred inflation higher,” said Brian O’Reilly, head of market strategy at Mediolanum International Funds, told The Wall Street Journal.
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“The process won’t be painless, and I think he’s being more upfront about that,” said Neil Dutta, head of U.S. economics at Renaissance Macro Research, told The New York Times. “The likelihood of recession is rising, because that’s the solution to the inflation problem — that’s what they’re telling you.”
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Powell is not budging on having restrictive policy and that should mean the economy will steadily weaken going forward," Oanda Senior Market Analyst Edward Moya wrote in an email. Powell drove home the point that when they are done raising rates that we should expect them to stay there for a long period of time ... There was no dovish pivot, but it seems financial markets are getting close to fully pricing in the remaining Fed rate hikes."
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“In essence, Powell is clearly stating that right now, fighting inflation is more important than supporting growth,” said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial, told CNBC.Important events
8 p.m. HKT/SGT(12 p.m. UTC): CleanSpark third quarter earnings
8:30 a.m. HKT/SGT(1:30 a.m. UTC): Australia retail earnings (July/MoM)
1 p.m. HKT/SGT(5 a.m. UTC): Japan leading economic index (June)
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