Finance & economics | The infrastructure cracks

Why crypto’s bruising comedown matters

It has prompted flight from some stablecoins into others

Bitcoin offices in Istanbul, Turkey seen on May 11, 2022. . Parallel to the global stock market, which has been stretched by the Fed's 50 basis point policy rate hike, he sold $1 billion in cryptocurrencies to keep the stable coin TerraUSD (UST) at $1. UST, which rose to $ 0.95 yesterday, fell again to $ 0.36 today. The daily loss of LUNA, the cryptocurrency of the Terra network, reached 97 percent. Bitcoin also fell to 29,039.54, its lowest level since January. (Photo by Umit Turhan Coskun/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

It has been a vicious year for financial markets, and more punishing still for crypto assets. The market capitalisation of crypto has slumped to just $1.3trn, from nearly $3trn in November. On May 18th bitcoin traded at around $29,000, a mere 40% of its all-time high in November; the price of ether, another cryptocurrency, has collapsed just as spectacularly. Six months ago Coinbase, an exchange and the leading crypto-industry stock, was worth $79bn. Now it is valued at just $14bn, and the firm is “reassessing its headcount needs”.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Unstablecoin”

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