Vancouver Sun

Bitcoin’s value falls almost 50 per cent over three months

- ANDREA PETERSON

WASHINGTON — In the past three months, the price of the cryptocurr­ency bitcoin has fallen nearly 50 per cent — going from about $ 630 per bitcoin to $ 320 per bitcoin, according to CoinDesk’s bitcoin price index, which averages the prices on major exchanges.

That’s obviously an extreme shift, though bitcoin trading prices are notoriousl­y volatile, sometimes making similar percentage drops in a matter of hours or days.

The difference here is that it appears to be a slow, measured pattern of decline.

There has been major regulatory news in the past few months, including New York’s proposed rules for virtual currencies and Russia’s proposal to punish their use. But that doesn’t seem to have produced the same type of seismic shifts as when China ordered local payment processors to stop transactio­ns involving digital currencies such as bitcoin.

But Jerry Brito, executive director of industry- backed think- tank Coin Center, said he believes the downward trend in bitcoin may be related to its rising popularity among merchants in recent months.

In September, Overstock. com became the first major online retailer to accept the cryptocurr­ency globally.

“It’s hard to tell what exactly causes these price movements, but what I think makes most sense is that as bitcoin merchant adoption grows, there is increasing sell pressure in the market,” Brito says. “Because there are not yet very good hedging instrument­s for bitcoin, merchants that accept bitcoin for payment will immediatel­y sell, so as to not be exposed to any volatility.”

Merchants don’t want to hold on to the bitcoins they accept as payment. Thus, Brito says, there’s a constant sell pressure, which he believes may have snowballed into the downward trend.

Brito is optimistic, however, about the future of the market, saying that “needed hedging instrument­s are coming along very shortly.”

The $ 320 exchange rate that the cryptocurr­ency is floating around is a substantia­l drop from the highs of last year, when bitcoins reached more than $ 1,100 on some markets near the end of the year after dramatic surges.

Bitcoin received intense media coverage as it experience­d regulatory turmoil, a bankruptcy scandal and various attempts to unmask the cryptocurr­ency’s mysterious creator.

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