‘Nothing Special’ — Bitcoin Slumps 6% on Coronavirus, Chinese New Year
Bitcoin (BTC) has shed 6% in a week thanks mainly to Chinese New Year and uncertainty over coronavirus, commentators are suggesting.
Analyzing Bitcoin price data along with Chinese stocks’ performance on Jan. 24, social media resource Light said a slump in performance had spread to cryptocurrency.
Cryptocurrency market daily overview. Source: Coin360
Stocks correlation shows Bitcoin’s “global stage”
Over the past several days, it notes, Bitcoin has in fact broadly correlated with stocks. Such behavior is reminiscent of what many perceived as a reaction to another global event — the Iran crisis — earlier this month.
“China coronavirus-driven risk-off blanketing Chinese equities… and Bitcoin. Iran correlation, now Chinese equities,” Light commented.
The analysis summarized:
“If there was ever a statement to the effect, Bitcoin has now made it to the global stage.”
Bitcoin vs. Chinese equities. Source: Light/ Twitter
Chinese New Year pressure returns
Coronavirus continues to spread beyond China, despite authorities’ attempts to contain it by imposing travel bans and boosting healthcare provision.
BTC/USD has lost just over 6% in the past seven days and at press time trading at $8,300. The virus “factor” comes at a sensitive time historically, data reveals, with Chinese New Year traditionally creating sell pressure for Bitcoin.
Compiled by trader and analyst Alex Krueger, figures circulating on Twitter show that in the run-up to the celebrations, Bitcoin returns often turn out negative.
In 2019, they averaged around -0.2% losses for the week prior, but Krueger himself appeared unperturbed by the results.
“Nothing special,” he summarized on Jan. 22.
As Cointelegraph reported, critics have protested against the theory that Bitcoin price action is directly influenced by geopolitical or other world events.
Nonetheless, issues involving China tend to impact the market conspicuously, against the backdrop of a blanket crypto trading ban imposed by Beijing in 2017. The country still accounts for the majority of Bitcoin mining activity.