First Mover Asia: Bitcoin, Ether Continue Their Rapid Descent in Volatility

Bitcoin and ether continued their 2022 nostalgia tours, with the two largest cryptos by market capitalization holding almost precisely where they stood for the last two weeks of December.

BTC was recently trading at about $16,850, flat over the last 24 hours as investors mulled early 2023 economic indicators that seemed at odds and ongoing U.S. central bank resolve to raise interest rates for at least the first part of 2023. Ether followed a similar pattern to trade at just above $1,200, its perch on Wednesday, same time. Other major cryptos also spent much of Wednesday hovering within their most recent ranges.

ADA, the token of the Cardano blockchain, was recently up 1.8%. The CoinDesk Market Index (CDI), an index measuring cryptos’ performance, recently inched down 0.19%.

In an interview with CoinDesk TV’s First Mover program, Katie Stockton, managing partner of research group Fairlead Strategies, noted the “downtrend” in bitcoin and altcoins. “Since May or so we’ve seen them stair step lower,” Stockton said. “Right now, we’ve seen a bit of a plateau. They seem to end with a few days of downside volatility. And then we get into another consolidation phase, the likes of which we’ve seen over the past seven to eight weeks.”

She added: “Now, within that context, with the consolidation phase underway within the downtrend, we’ve obviously not seen any kind of breakouts above resistance.”

On the third trading day of the new year, equity markets slumped with the tech-focused Nasdaq falling 1.5% and the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) dropping 1.2% and 1%, respectively – reaction to a surprisingly strong report by human resources software and services provider ADP showing employers adding 235,000 jobs in December. The monthly measure of employment markets rekindled fears that the economy was not slowing as much as U.S. central bankers had hoped and undercut hopes stirred by a U.S. Labor Department report showing a slight downturn in overall, available jobs.

Job cuts highlighted crypto news on Thursday. Crypto bank Silvergate Capital (SI) cut 40% of its staff, or about 200 employees, the company said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and beleaguered Genesis Global trading, a subsidiary of crypto conglomerate Digital Currency Group (CoinDesk’s parent company) eliminated about 30% of its workers, taking it down to 145 employees, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Fairlead’s Stockton said warily that her group’s research strongly suggested that the current consolidation in crypto markets would “resolve to the downside.”

“We’re not advocating counter trend positions, given the risks inherent to bear market cycle(s),” Stockton said, adding: “We’re out there kind of with you looking for signs of a long-term bottom as sort of a major low, and we actually do think that this year will capture a major low, but we just don’t have it indications of it quite yet.”