Bitcoin trades lower as crypto pulls back from Musk rally

Tesla founder signals support for bitcoin miners’ efforts to makes operations environmentally friendly

Photograph: iStock
Photograph: iStock

Bitcoin traded lower on Tuesday as prices pulled back from a double-digit percentage rally, stoked in part by Elon Musk’s effort to bolster the token’s green credentials on Twitter.

The largest digital currency slipped as much as 6.5 per cent to $36,494 in New York, following a 16 per cent jump on Monday. The wider Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index and tokens including ether also dropped.

The Tesla chief executive has roiled the token's price this month, triggering a selloff by criticising its energy profile and suspending bitcoin payments. Heightened regulatory rhetoric on cryptocurrencies from China also pressured the sector.

"If the market continues to see wild swings based on Elon Musk tweets, it's going to be a big setback for this asset class," said Matt Maley, chief market strategist for Miller Tabak + Co. "The fact that it sees such wild swings to the tweets from one person takes away the legitimacy of the asset class."

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Pledges to make the industry more green have picked up since Mr Musk’s criticisms. Several miners joined the Crypto Climate Accord, a private-sector initiative to decarbonise the crypto industry by 2030.

Mr Musk and Michael Saylor, another long-time bitcoin booster, tweeted Monday that they had held a call with major North American miners, including Michael Novogratz's Galaxy Digital and publicly traded Hut 8 Mining Corp, to discuss "energy usage transparency".

Mr Saylor said the group agreed to form the Bitcoin Mining Council "to standardise energy reporting."

Mr Musk and Mr Saylor’s initiative to make bitcoin “‘greener’ bodes well for ESG narrative and institutional adoption”, David Grider, strategist at Fundstrat Global Advisors LLC, wrote in a note.

At the same time, it will take years for many of the largest miners to recalibrate where they source their energy. Bitcoin’s heavy use of power fired by polluting fossil fuels is a long-standing problem. Miners use hundreds of computers that run around the clock to verify bitcoin transactions in exchange for new coins.

Despite that, Mr Musk in February plowed $1.5 billion of Tesla’s corporate cash into the token and said the electric-vehicle maker would accept it as payment for vehicles, before rescinding the latter decision earlier in May.

While the billionaire has since said he strongly believes in cryptocurrencies as long as they don’t drive a massive increase in fossil fuel use, digital tokens are still nursing losses from his spate of comments.

The market value of more than 7,000 coins tracked by CoinGecko is down more than $800 billion from a May peak of some $2.6 trillion. Bitcoin is about $25,000 off its mid-April record.

A measure of implied volatility on bitcoin comparable to the US equity market’s VIX indicator sits at 129, higher than the stock version has ever reached in 30 years. – Bloomberg