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What caused the lastest cryptocrash?

  • May 13, 2022

Some cryptocurrency billionaires have lost over half their wealth over the last weeks as skittish investors pulled their cash out of the notoriously risky asset. A sell-off wiped out more than $200 billion (€192 billion) from the cryptocurrency market in 24 hours alone as of Thursday, according to price-tracking website CoinMarketCap. But the wealthy aren’t the only ones at risk.

The latest slump was driven in large by peculiar behavior from so-called stablecoins. Stablecoins are meant to hold a strong peg to an external asset, like gold or the US dollar. This makes them less price-volatile than other cryptocurrencies, like bitcoin, the world’s most popular cryptocurrency, known for its big risk and big rewards. Backing by an external asset or an algorithm that controls the coin’s supply keeps a stablecoin’s price, well, stable.

Until it doesn’t, that is. The promise behind TerraUSD, also known as UST, the world’s third-largest stablecoin, was that it would always maintain parity with the US dollar.

At the time of publication, the coin’s value has completely collapsed. This happened after massive withdrawals from Terra ignited fears that the coin would crash, causing even more traders to pull out. The world’s largest stablecoin, tether, also briefly became unpegged, its price falling to less than $1 US.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    The cryptic token

    Bitcoin is thought of as a digital currency because it exists only virtually, without any physical coins or notes. It resides in a decentralized, encrypted network that is independent of commercial or central banks. This allows Bitcoin to be exchanged under the same conditions all around the globe. It’s also a cryptocurrency, because it uses encryption to conceal users’ identities and activities.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    Bitcoin’s mysterious founder

    The cryptocurrency was first publicly described in 2008 by an unknown person — or group of people — who used the name Satoshi Nakamoto. Its implementation began in January 2009, when it was released as open-source software.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    How to get hold of Bitcoin

    There are three different ways to acquire Bitcoin: First, you can buy the cryptocurrency with legal tender (e.g. dollars and euros) at online exchanges such as Coinbase or Bitfinance. Second, you may accept Bitcoin as a payment in exchange for your products and services. And third, you can create your own Bitcoins in a process known as mining.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    No Bitcoins without a wallet

    Before you can buy Bitcoin you have to install so-called wallet software onto your computer. It contains a public key (your address) as well as a private key that allows only the owner of the wallet to send or receive cryptocurrency. Smartphones, USB sticks or any other digital hardware or cloud-based data storage can serve as wallet. Without the digital wallet, no Bitcoin for you.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    Hats off for Bitcoin purchases!

    To see how the process of paying with Bitcoin works, let’s imagine Mr. X wants to buy a hat from Ms. Y. First thing Ms. Y needs to do is send Mr. X her public wallet address, which is like her Bitcoin bank account.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    A chain of blocks

    After Mr. X has received the public wallet address of Ms. Y, he signs off the transaction with his private key to verify that he is indeed the sender of the digital currency. The transaction is now stored on the Bitcoin blockchain with thousands of other transactions that are made with Bitcoin every day.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    Miners in the digital age

    Now Mr. X’s transaction is broadcast to all other participants in the peer-to-peer blockchain network, which are also called nodes. Essentially, they are private computers, or “miners,” which verify the validity of his transaction. After that, the Bitcoin gets sent to Ms. Y’s public address, where she can now unlock the transfer with her private key.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    The Bitcoin machine room

    Theoretically, everyone can become a “miner” in the blockchain network. But most of it is done in huge computer farms that boast the necessary computing power. Bitcoin processing keeps transactions secure by chronologically adding new transactions (or blocks) to the chain and keeping them in the queue.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    An irreversible string of data

    The Bitcoin transaction between Mr. X and Ms. Y is finally included in a vast public ledger, the blockchain, where all confirmed transactions exist as blocks. As each block enters the system, all users are made aware of each transaction. Who has sent how many Bitcoins to whom, however, remains anonymous.Once confirmed, a transaction can’t be reversed — by anybody.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    Controversial mining for Bitcoins

    Miners generate new Bitcoins when they process transactions, which they do using special decryption software. Once solved, a new block is added to the chain and the miner is rewarded with Bitcoins. China is the biggest miner in the Bitcoin network. It’s cheap electricity from coal gives it a competitive edge over rival miners, mainly in the US, Russia, Iran and Malaysia.

  • Bitcoin explained: How it works and what it is good for

    Power-hungry Bitcoin

    Due to the massive computing power needed for crypto mining and processing, the Bitcoin network consumes vast amounts of energy — about 120 terrawatt hours of power per year. University of Cambridge’s Bitcoin Electricity Consumption index, has calculated the cryptocurrency requires more energy than each of the countries shown in blue on the map above. Graphics: Per Sander Text: Gudrun Haupt

    Author: Gudrun Haupt


Conspiracy or comeuppance? 

Some in the cryptospace are speculating that it was an orchestrated attack to undermine the reputation of stablecoins. But cryptocurrencies are also grappling with the changing conditions of the global economy. 

“We’re in times of higher uncertainty,” Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of foreign exchange at Commerzbank, told DW. “You can see that in the weak stock market. And you see that in all the other assets, which are also volatile right now. So cryptocurrencies are now extremely volatile — and suffering because of that.”

People in the cryptomarket are used to big swings. But the unusual economic environment we’re now in is unnerving even traditional investors. Major stock indexes in the US saw a sell-off last week after the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates, part of its plan to combat spiking consumer prices.

In many countries, years of ultralow interest rates coupled with the government stimulus unleashed during the pandemic sent streams of cash flowing into riskier investments, like tech stocks and crypto. Now those initiatives are winding down, and the potential for inflation to weigh on economic growth has many seeking safer investments than they’d gone for in the past.

“The notion of decentralized cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin serving as an inflation hedge has been clearly refuted by the sharp fall in their prices in the face of inflation surges around the world,” Eswar Prasad, professor of economics at Cornell University in the US, told DW.

‘Cryptowinter’ is coming

Bitcoin has also fallen below the ever important $30,000 mark, nearly hitting $25,000 on Thursday, a price it hasn’t seen in 16 months. Over that time period, the world watched as electric carmaker Tesla added $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin to its balance sheet and the countries of El Salvador and the Central African Republic made the cryptocurrency into a form of legal tender. Companies like Starbucks and PayPal began accepting it as payment.

These moves helped legitimize bitcoin and the cryptocurrency market as a whole, which saw major gains over the course of the pandemic. The cryptocurrency hit a high of $68,000 in November 2021.

The explosion in the cryptoworld this week and the gradual decline leading up to it now have many talking about a potential “cryptowinter” setting in. According to the Financial Times, the global digital assets market has lost half of its value since its peak in November of last year.

Risk for emerging markets

This is particularly concerning for emerging markets, like El Salvador, that have invested heavily in cryptocurrency. According to Bloomberg, the country, which has invested at least $105 million in bitcoin since last September, has lost around $40 million since March. That’s more than El Salvador owes for its next foreign bond payment due in June.

“Embracing a speculative financial asset as the national legal tender is an act of folly that could have grave consequences for developing economies and their citizens, some of which are already becoming apparent,” Prasad said.

A 2021 report from the Bank of America showed that after the US, emerging markets led the way in the trading, mining and spending of cryptocurrencies. Leaders included China, Colombia, India, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Ukraine, and Vietnam.

In January, the International Monetary Fund warned that the volatility of cryptocurrencies was having a “destabilizing” effect on the flow of capital in emerging markets and that using it in place of traditional currencies posed “immediate and acute risks,” the Financial Times reported.

Regulation in the cards

It’s still unclear whether this is the bursting of the cryptobubble long predicted by skeptics. TerraUSD’s founder is scrambling for external financing to restore the coin’s dollar parity, while tether, the main stablecoin used to buy bitcoin, regained its 1-to-1 peg. Its management seemed largely unfazed by the crisis. 

“With cryptocurrencies, there is still the danger that one or the other cryptocurrency, or cryptocurrencies as a whole, suddenly become an asset class that no one is interested in anymore,” said Leuchtmann. “And therefore, we always have the danger that we see a massive crash in one or the other cryptocurrency, because speculative investors no longer come back.”

What is clear is that the wobbly state of the global economy has made a cryptocrash feel more plausible, also for regulators. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen made a push this week for the regulation of digital assets. Stablecoin regulation by the end of 2022 would be “highly appropriate,” she said, considering the “many risks associated with cryptocurrencies.”

Edited by: Hardy Graupner

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/what-caused-the-lastest-cryptocrash/a-61787326?maca=en-rss-en-bus-2091-xml-atom

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