The top cryptocurrencies are recovering after a sharp plunge in the wake of the FTX collapse
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Bitcoin extended its gains for the ninth straight day on Thursday and surged above $18,000, in the longest winning streak since 2020.
The world’s most popular cryptocurrency gained more than 10% in January, and jumped by 8% over the past week. As of 11am GMT on Thursday, it was trading at $18,187, marking a 4% surge over the past 24 hours, according to the CoinMarketCap website.
Bitcoin’s value has grown amid cooling inflation and hopes that “the Federal Reserve will slow the pace of interest-rate hikes,” Bloomberg reported, adding that the latest rally comes as a “stark contrast to last year’s slump.”
Bitcoin fell nearly 65% in 2022 as the wider cryptocurrency market faced headwinds resulting from numerous bankruptcies and collapses in the sector, including the implosion of FTX, the second-largest crypto exchange at the time of its insolvency.
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“Risk assets have been rallying, I think, for the reason that the terminal rate is coming slowly but surely into the foreground and positioning has been bearish and transitioning, which means bullish near-term price action,” the founder of Tallbacken Capital Advisors, Michael Purves, said.
Despite recent predictions that Bitcoin could plunge 70% this year due to the fallout of the FTX collapse, analysts believe that once the outlook for the digital-asset market clears up, large players, including institutions, will come back, pushing up the price.
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