Fly On Wall Street

Bitcoin falls 8% in five days; here are 4 reasons behind the plunge

Bitcoin continues to fall on Wednesday, April 17, by declining over 3.84 per cent to $61,309. The world’s largest cryptocurrency has fallen over 8.81 per cent in past five days and over 10.31 per cent in the last one month.

The Commerce Department’s Census Bureau reported a 0.7% increase in retail sales last month. Additionally, data for February was revised upward, indicating a stronger rebound of 0.9%, marking the largest gain in over a year, as opposed to the initially reported 0.6%.

Over the past 24 hours, the global cryptocurrency market experienced a 4.1% decrease, reaching approximately $2.29 trillion in market capitalization.

Presently, the total volume within the DeFi sector stands at $9.35 billion, accounting for 7.92% of the entire cryptocurrency market’s 24-hour trading volume. Meanwhile, the collective volume of stablecoins amounts to $110.24 billion, constituting 93.37% of the total 24-hour trading volume in the cryptocurrency market, as reported by CoinMarketCap.

Within the same timeframe, Bitcoin’s market capitalization dropped to $1.239 trillion. Bitcoin’s dominance is currently at 54.11%, as indicated by CoinMarketCap. Moreover, Bitcoin’s trading volume in the past 24 hours increased by 6.23% to reach $44.77 billion.

“After Iran Israel tensions escalated on the weekend, BTC now seems to slowly trade around the halving news as its main fundamental. A strong support seems to be formed at $60k as BTC continues to outperform the majority of the altcoins. To put things into context, one of the most traded crypto-crypto non-stable pair – ETH/BTC has broken down its support at 0.05 BTC per ETH. This could technically go as lower as 0.04 meaning BTC could further continue to outperform Ethereum, and historically, all altcoins,” said CoinSwitch Markets Desk.

What’s weighing on bitcoin prices?

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