(Bloomberg) — Cryptocurrency prices extended their slide as escalating tariff war tensions and diminishing prospects of further Federal Reserve rate cuts offset a wave of pro-crypto announcements from President Donald Trump last week.
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Risk assets like crypto are under pressure amid anxiety that the Trump’s tariffs and government firings will torpedo growth in the world’s largest economy. US equities slumped and Treasuries rallied as investors sought a refuge.
“While Trump’s strategic crypto reserve announcement initially drove optimism, the rally quickly unraveled amid aggressive selling linked to worsening macro conditions,” wrote Nikolay Karpenko, director at B2C2.
Bitcoin slid 5.4% to $78,558 as of 1:44 p.m. New York time on Monday, the lowest level since Feb. 28. Solana, Cardano and XRP, all tokens that Trump had mentioned as possible candidates for a digital-asset stockpile but were not mentioned in Trump’s executive order, each slumped even more. Crypto-linked stocks slid, with Coinbase Global Inc. dropping 14% for its biggest decline since October and Michael Saylor’s levered Bitcoin proxy Strategy losing 16%.
Trump’s crypto-friendly stance, including an order to create a US Bitcoin reserve and a separate stockpile of other tokens, along with a high-profile summit with industry executives in Washington on Friday, has done little to lift market sentiment. While the administration pledged to capitalize the reserve with crypto seized in legal proceedings, the absence of fresh capital commitments disappointed investors.
“The market perceived the summit as underwhelming and top cryptocurrencies dropped after it was revealed that the widely anticipated crypto reserve would only hold existing government holdings,” said Jeff Mei, chief operating officer at crypto exchange BTSE.
The US currently owns about $17 billion worth of Bitcoin and about $400 million worth of several other tokens, largely attributable to asset forfeitures related to civil and criminal cases.
Investors are rationally more bullish on crypto given recent developments like the reduced US Securities and Exchange Commission enforcement, but other factors are more nuanced or even negative, said Ari Paul, co-founder of BlockTower Capital.
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