Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency by market capitalisation, slid 6.53% to $78,719.63 by 12:48 p.m. ET (1748 GMT) on Saturday, extending losses from the previous session.
On Friday, bitcoin touched a low of $81,104 — its weakest level since November 21 — as the U.S. dollar strengthened following the selection of former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh as the next Fed chair. Investors have voiced concerns that Warsh could pursue tighter liquidity conditions across the financial system.
Warsh has argued for sweeping changes at the central bank and has advocated, among other measures, reducing the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet.
Bitcoin and other digital assets have often benefited from an expanded Fed balance sheet, typically gaining when abundant liquidity supported risk and speculative investments.

Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, said the Fed’s “oversized balance sheet, coupled with heavy-handed banking regulation,” had effectively trapped liquidity within Wall Street rather than allowing it to flow to the broader economy, contributing to asset bubbles in areas such as bonds, cryptocurrencies, metals and meme stocks.
Ether also dropped sharply, falling 11.76% to $2,387.77 on Saturday afternoon. Cryptocurrencies have struggled to find clear direction since their sharp decline last year, lagging behind strong rallies in gold and equities.
“Sometimes these price corrections can become self-reinforcing,” Jacobsen said, noting that Friday’s sudden sell-off had served as a reminder of market risk. He added that further selling in the coming days was “possible, if not likely.”
Cryptocurrencies are struggling during what had been expected to be a period of strong inflows and supportive regulation under President Donald Trump. Bitcoin, the market leader, has shed about one-third of its value since hitting record highs last October.
Sources: Reuters
Leave a comment