p>Investors are anticipating more excitement in bitcoin and the other cryptocurrency markets, as fears about an overly hawkish Federal Reserve threaten to squelch market appetite for risk in all markets.</p><p>The typical volatility associated with cryptocurrency was visible in recent weeks. Bitcoin is the most popular cryptocurrency, has increased by around 33% since Jan. 24. It has been trading at $43,850. The price has risen from falling to a point that cut the cost by half from November's record-setting high. Its major rival, Ethereum, is up by about 45% since Jan. 24 to around $3,200 in the wake of a near 56% nosedive from its record-setting $4,868 that was in November.</p><p></p><p>While advocates of cryptocurrency once touted their lack of correlation to other assets bitcoin and its peers enjoyed huge gains over recent two years. They've risen in tandem with stocks as Fed and the rest of central banks unleashed unprecedented amounts of stimulus in the world economy. http://koyomi.vis.ne.jp/wiki/index.php?beetlepolice5 is up 1,039 percent since March 2019, and Ether has gained 2,940%, but the increases in both cryptocurrencies have been slowed by a series of stomach-churning selloffs.</p><p></p><p>The recent volatility in the market has been accompanied by a wider market selling spurred by investors shifting their portfolios around to account for the more aggressive Fed that is likely to increase rates nearly seven times this year in order to combats the rising cost of living. The benchmark S&P 500 index (.SPX) is down 5.5 percentage year-to date, while the high-tech Nasdaq (.IXIC) was down by 9.3%. dropped 9.3%.</p><p>A fear that an aggressive pace of tightening by the central bank going forward will be a savage blow to high-risk assets has made it difficult for traders to maintain their positive outlook on bitcoin and other cryptos. This asset class has already been is characterized by high volatility.</p><p></p><p>Rising tensions in Ukraine which is where Washington warned that a Russian invasion could be imminent at any moment, could generate market-wide volatility, investors said. Find out more</p><p>Bitcoin is "really become the ultimate trend trade, and there are plenty of risks that could cause a 40% drop seemingly out of thin air," said Ed Moya of Oanda, a senior analyst. Oanda.</p><p>There are a few analysts from looking to determine the true value of the currency or pinpoint potential price levels.</p><p>Analysts at JPMorgan estimate bitcoin's current fair value at around $38,000 , which is about 15% less than its current price based upon its volatility in comparison with that of gold. Gold is an asset that investors frequently use to hedge their portfolios against fluctuations in the economy and inflation.</p><p>Vanda Research, meanwhile, stated in a recent report that the majority of bearish bets on a lower bitcoin price were placed at about $47,000 "there could be an enormous short-squeeze if this threshold is exceeded, and retail investors are reintroduced to crypto-trading."</p><p>Meanwhile, correlations between bitcoin and the S&P 500 hit an all-time high on Jan 31, according data collected by BofA Global Research, undercutting the argument for those who want to make use of bitcoin as an investment to protect against market volatility.</p><p>Investors next week can look forward to minutes from the Federal Reserve's most recent meeting on monetary policy to be sent out Wednesday. http://orbit.o0o0.jp/wiki/index.php?richardcoffey573617 (WMT.N) as well as chipmaker Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) will include among the companies releasing resultsas earnings season begins.</p><p>Some investors are ready to take on the volatility of bitcoin, assuming that the value for blockchain tech, its built in supply limit, as well as the network effect it produces, will endure despite the constant price swings.</p><p>Jurrien Timmer director of global macro at Fidelity and Fidelity, compared the current speculation in cryptocurrencies to the fluctuations in tech stocks seen during the dotcom boom nearly two decades ago. It was a boom-and-bust time that saw a comparatively small group of firms left standing.</p><p><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/OfVumcKtpG8" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>"Amazon is still going strong and Apple is around as well and they're larger than ever before and they're hoping that for bitcoin it will be identical," his statement reads. "But bitcoin isn' https://www.pcb.its.dot.gov/PageRedirect.aspx?redirectedurl=https://www.openlearning.com/u/jennycoduti-r71gk6/about/?share=1 to those waves of speculation and sentiment."</p><p>Bitcoin could hit $100,000 by 2023. Timmer has said, using his supply and demand models.</p><p>Other experts believe that mature cryptocurrency, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum are not likely in delivering the spectacular gains they have made since the time of their creation.</p><p>Instead, they're turning towards the vast universe of new alternative currencies that are designed to take advantage of the wealth pouring into the crypto-currency space such as the metaverse and NFTs. The latter saw $30,000 worth of venture capital investment in 2017, according to PitchBook?.<img width="480" src="https://static.news.bitcoin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/MiIIGMZU-bitcoincom.jpg"></p><p>The most popular altcoins are cosmos Terra Luna, and Polkadot in the range of 20.5 percent (38%), 20.5%, and 25.5% year-to-date, respectively, at the time of coinmarketcap.com.</p><p>Understanding the risks associated with decentralized finance and the risk of them going to be one the main challenges for investors in 2022, according to Lily Francus, director of quantitative research strategy at Moody's Analytics.</p><p>Cryptocurrencies "are likely to remain extremely volatile in the coming years, but there are significant players on both the institutional side and the retail side that are expanding, and so the interest is growing," said Oanda's Moya.</p>


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