Bitcoin fell Monday as investors took profits after its December rally.
The price of the cryptocurrency was recently lower by more than 3% at $42,151.38, according to Coinbase, after a big drop Sunday night that at one point took it as low as about $40,300. Bitcoin topped $44,000 last week and traded just below that level through the weekend.
Meanwhile, ether fell 4% Monday to $2,238.38 while Solana’s SOL token and Ripple’s XRP lost about 5% each.
The moves come after a 12% advance for bitcoin In December, according to Coin Metrics, as expectations grew that the SEC could approve the first spot bitcoin ETF in early January. Galaxy Digital estimates the addressable market size of a U.S. bitcoin ETF to be about $14 trillion in the first year after a launch, growing to about $26 trillion in the second year.
“Bitcoin continues to stay red hot,” Wolfe Research’s Rob Ginsberg said in a recent client note. “The coin seems to be trading with a fervor not seen since the early months of ’21 when it ripped to its all-time high. The months of October and November saw price head another 56% higher.”
Bitcoin has been on a steady climb in recent weeks, following a long period of market apathy that saw the price trade in a narrow range for months.
The sudden pullback triggered a spike in liquidations. According to CoinGlass, bitcoin has seen $93.44 million in long liquidations over the past 12 hours while ether has seen $65.42 million.
Ginsberg said there’s plenty of momentum left in the current bitcoin uptrend. Chart analysts agree the cryptocurrency would have to fall further still for them to reconsider the strength of the rally.
A new bitcoin spot ETF would serve as just the first of a series of positive catalysts lined up for bitcoin next year. While potential bitcoin investors are holding out for an ETF, others in the market are optimistic about a price increase in the months following the Bitcoin halving, which is expected to take place in spring 2024.
They’re also following moves by the Federal Reserve, particularly this week with its final policy meeting of the year scheduled to begin Tuesday, for clues about the likelihood that the central bank could cut rates sometime in 2024.