Bitcoin falls below $40,000 for the first time in almost a month as investors assess global macro risks

Bitcoin falls below ,000 for the first time in almost a month as investors assess global macro risks


A Bitcoin logo inside a BitBase cryptocurrency exchange in Madrid, Spain, on Thursday, March 17, 2022.

Angel Navarrete | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The price of stumbled on Monday as investors assessed the risks from rising rates and the potential for more tightening by the Federal Reserve.

Bitcoin last fell 7% to $40,009.78, according to Coin Metrics. Earlier in the day it fell to $39,785.68, falling below the key $40,000 support level for the first time since Mar. 16.

The decline came after the 10-year Treasury yield hit a three-year high of 2.78% Monday. Riskier assets tend to fall when yields rise. On Monday the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was down by more than 1%. Though bitcoin should trade independently of the stock market, a correlation between the two has been particularly high in recent months.

“Bitcoin and traditional markets have continued to respond negatively to expectations that the U.S. Fed will tighten its monetary policy to fight inflation, and Tuesday’s CPI release seems to be weighing heavily,” said Riyad Carey, a research analyst at Kaiko. “Globally, the continuing war in Ukraine and increasing shutdowns in China are dragging on markets.”

Carey also noted the market reaction to Terraform Labs buying bitcoin in troves for its stablecoin reserves – it holds about 40,000 bitcoin after buying $175 million worth over the weekend – has “largely played out.” Two weeks ago bitcoin climbed over the $48,000 level, turning positive for the year, as the group behind the Terra stablecoin stepped up its bitcoin buying.

Tokens across the crypto market were lower as well. Ether declined by about 9% along with other platform networks, according to Coin Metrics. Algorand’s ALGO lost more than 9%. Solana’s SOL and Cardano’s ADA were each down by 11%.

WATCH: CNBC’s full interview with ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood on her crypto outlook



Source

Deutsche Bank says the ‘honeymoon is over’ for AI
World

Deutsche Bank says the ‘honeymoon is over’ for AI

This year will be the most difficult one yet for artificial intelligence, according to Deutsche Bank Research Institute. AI adoption has expanded in recent years, but Wall Street is betting that 2026 will see a reckoning of the technology — and the web of trades around the trend — as the market demands tangible returns […]

Read More
Salesforce’s Benioff calls for AI regulation, says models have become ‘suicide coaches’
World

Salesforce’s Benioff calls for AI regulation, says models have become ‘suicide coaches’

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said Tuesday that “there has to be some regulation” of artificial intelligence, pointing to several documented cases of suicide linked to the technology. “This year, you really saw something pretty horrific, which is these AI models became suicide coaches,” Benioff told CNBC’s Sarah Eisen Tuesday at the World Economic Forum’s flagship […]

Read More
Danish pension fund to sell 0 million in Treasurys, citing ‘poor’ U.S. government finances
World

Danish pension fund to sell $100 million in Treasurys, citing ‘poor’ U.S. government finances

Protesters with Danish and Greenlandic flags attend a demonstration in Copenhagen, Denmark, Jan. 17, 2026. Nichlas Pollier | Bloomberg | Getty Images Danish pension operator AkademikerPension said it is exiting U.S. Treasurys because of finance concerns as Denmark spars with President Donald Trump over his threats to take over Greenland. Anders Schelde, AkademikerPension’s investing chief, […]

Read More