As bitcoin lurches, Wall Street plots its way into cryptoland
To work out the fate of crypto-investing, watch what the banks do next
CRYPTO BUFFS have had a punishing week. On May 13th Tether, which issues a “stablecoin” widely used to facilitate bitcoin trading, said that just 2.9% of its $58bn-worth of coins is backed by cash reserves, feeding doubts about its dollar peg. Elon Musk, Tesla’s boss, tweeted that the electric-car maker would not after all accept payments in bitcoin. Then on May 18th China warned financial firms against servicing cryptocurrencies. The price of bitcoin tumbled to $30,000, less than half its record high in April, before stabilising at around $39,000.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Bit by bit”
Finance & economics May 22nd 2021
More from Finance & economics
Trump’s brutal tariffs far outstrip any he has imposed before
Canada, Mexico and China are going to be made to suffer
Why your portfolio is less diversified than you might think
The most important idea in modern finance has become maddeningly hard to implement
Can Germany’s economy stage an unexpected recovery?
The situation is dire, but there are glimmers of hope
Giorgia Meloni has grand banking ambitions
Will Italy’s nationalist prime minister manage to concentrate financial power?
Tech tycoons have got the economics of AI wrong
Following DeepSeek’s breakthrough, the Jevons paradox provides less comfort than they imagine
Donald Trump’s economic warfare has a new front
The president has threatened to blow up the global tax system. Will allies be able to stop him?