A sharp rise in bitcoin prices has pushed the cryptocurrency above $30,000 (£24,118) for the first time since June 10 last year, just before crypto lending company Celsius froze withdrawals in the run-up to its collapse.
Even given this recovery, the token is still well below the all-time high of $68,000 in November 2021, and well below where it was before the failure of the Terra stablecoin caused the “crypto winter”.
Nevertheless, bitcoin’s recent steady increase in value has sparked discussions of another cryptocurrency boom – and reignited fears of widespread market manipulation.
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank last month and the wider contagion it has unleashed across financial markets led some cryptocurrency fans to turn to bitcoin, the sector’s original and most valuable token, as a way to hedge against fears that the entire traditional “fiat” “economy would crumble.
That attitude was characterized by the American venture capitalist Balaji Srinivasan, who in March bet $1 million that the price of a single bitcoin would top $1 million by June this year. His claim was that the US dollar would soon experience hyperinflation, causing the dollar value of a bitcoin to rise.
“This is the moment the world is redomining bitcoin as digital gold, returning to a model much like the pre-20th century,” he tweeted, which explains the effort. “Everything will happen very quickly when people check what I say and see that the Federal Reserve has lied about how much money is in the banks. All dollar holders will be destroyed.”
Alex Adelman, CEO of bitcoin rewards app Lolli, said Monday’s rally “didn’t have a clear catalyst” but was “a bellwether for bitcoin’s recent bullish market conditions and strong investor confidence. Bitcoin’s ongoing strength suggests bitcoin is emerging from so-called ‘ cryptowinter’ into a new phase of strength and renewed interest from retail and institutional investors.”
But the rally, after bitcoin prices hovered at $28,000 for nearly a month before surging past $2,000 in a day, has also fueled concerns about market manipulation.
A 2022 report published by the US National Bureau of Economic Research found that “wash trading”, the practice of selling cryptocurrencies between related parties to influence the reported price, averaged “over 70% of the reported volume” on 29 unregulated exchanges.
In June 2022, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) denied permission to launch a bitcoin-linked exchange-traded fund, which would allow investors to buy exposure to the cryptocurrency on the public stock markets, after concluding that it was impossible to prevent fraud. and manipulation in the market from influencing the price.
In addition to wash trading, the SEC said the market can be affected by individuals with a “dominant position” in bitcoin who manipulate its pricing, through fraud and manipulation on trading platforms, and through manipulative activity involving stablecoins “including tether.”