Bitcoin drops to its 3-month low… then Elon Musk tweets

Tesla CEO Elon Musk arrives on the red carpet for the automobile awards "Das Goldene Lenkrad" (The golden steering wheel) given by a German newspaper in Berlin, Germany, Nov. 12, 2019. (Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke, file)

  • Musk clarifies Tesla has not sold bitcoin
  • Bitcoin rallies after plunging 9% to lowest since early Feb
  • Ether, dogecoin join selloff, and recover

LONDON — Bitcoin rallied from a three-month low on Monday in a volatile session that saw investors initially selling and then buying cryptocurrencies in the wake of Tesla boss Elon Musk’s tweets about the carmaker’s bitcoin holdings.

In his latest tweet, Musk said “Tesla has not sold any bitcoin”. That seeming clarification came after weekend tweets hinted that Tesla was considering or may have already sold some of its massive holdings.

Musk has boosted crypto markets with his enthusiasm for the asset class, but has lately roiled trade by appearing to cool on bitcoin in favour of its one-time parody, dogecoin. The gyrations are beginning to spook even steeled traders.

Bitcoin fell more than 9% on Monday to as low as $42,185, its lowest since Feb. 8, but rallied back to around $45,190 as of 0911 GMT.

Ether, linked to the ethereum blockhain, fell to as low as $3,123.94, and then bounced back to $3,540. Dogecoin fell nearly 7%, and all three are well under recent records.

“A nice pop, but this is small versus the Musk-induced selling that has been taking place lately,” said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com. “There is nothing new I can say about bitcoin – volatile, highly speculative, easy to manipulate; a bubble.”

Tesla disclosed in February that it had bought $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin in the first quarter. At the end of April, Musk said the company sold 10% of its holdings “to prove liquidity”.

The logo of the Bitcoin digital currency is seen in a shop in Marseille, France on Feb. 7, 2021. (Reuters/Eric Gaillard, file)

Bitcoin, designed as a payment tool, is little used for commerce in major economies, hampered by high volatility and relatively costly transactions.

The most popular digital currency is now down a third from its record high in mid-April and JPMorgan’s crunching of fund flow data shows investors exiting positions in recent weeks.

On Wednesday, Musk said Tesla would stop taking bitcoin as payment, owing to environmental concerns about energy use to process transactions. Defending that decision on Sunday, he suggested Tesla may have sold its own holdings.

An unverified Twitter account called @CryptoWhale, said:

In response, Musk wrote: “Indeed.”

It was not clear whether he was confirming sales or whether he referred only to the fact that he had faced criticism, until his clarification in Monday’s tweet.

Musk said Tesla would not sell its bitcoin, but the cryptocurrency has dropped by almost a quarter since Musk’s reversal on Tesla taking it as payment.

Dogecoin has also yet to fully recover from Musk describing it as a “hustle”, although he did boost the price last week by saying he was working to improve its efficiency.

For an asset class that has surged this year, with dogecoin up about a hundredfold, ether up more than fourfold and bitcoin gaining 45%, some are beginning to call time on the wild ride.

“Why would I want to buy bitcoin right now – even if I’m bullish—until the liquidation is over and you see some consolidation in price?” said Chris Weston of brokerage Pepperstone in Melbourne.

— Reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore, additional reporting by Radhika Anilkumar in Bengaluru, Vidya Ranganathan in Singapore and Thyagaraju Adinarayan in London; Editing by Gerry Doyle, Nick Macfie and Anil D’Silva

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