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Bitcoin drops 5% below $90,000; bearish factors rack up

Bitcoin dropped below $90,000. This was the steepest monthly drop since 2021's crypto crash. Investors were once again avoiding risk, and they pulled out of stocks, digital assets, and other digital assets.

At one point, the world's biggest cryptocurrency dropped by up to 6.1%. By 0942 GMT it had fallen nearly 5% to $86,754, its largest one-day drop in a year and was hovering around last month's 8-month low of $71,553.

Bitcoin lost more than $18,000 during November. This is its biggest dollar loss since the collapse of several cryptocurrencies in May 2021.

RISK INDICATOR

Bitcoin's relatively short life span means that there are few seasonal patterns to guide traders in predicting how it will behave in December.

Since its creation in 2012, Bitcoin has risen on average by 9.7% in December. October is the best month with an average gain 16.6% and September the worst with a 3.5% average loss. Analysts said that the tight correlation between bitcoin and the stock market could be more relevant at this time.

In a recent note, XTB Research Director Kathleen Brooks stated that "Bitcoin is a leading indicator of risk sentiment at this time and its decline does not bode very well for stocks to start the month."

She said that "there is no obvious driver" for Monday's market. However, last week's sharp drop in volatility, when the VIX dropped below the average of the past 12 months, could have worried some investors, who are still concerned about the uncertain outlook going into the year-end.

Ether, second largest cryptocurrency behind bitcoin in terms of market value, fell 6% to $2,840. It had lost 22% in November. This was the biggest drop since the 32% decline in February.

NEGATIVES ARE ADDING UP Mohit Kumar, a strategist at Jefferies, said that the crypto-negative factors leading up to the weekend would add pressure on bitcoin for Monday.

S&P Global, the world's leading stablecoin, downgraded Tether last week. It cited an increase in higher risk assets in Tether's reserves, and "persistent disclosure gaps," with which Tether "strongly disagrees." Phong Le told the podcast "What Bitcoin Did", on Friday, that Strategy, the largest corporate bitcoin owner in the world, would consider selling their holdings, if the "mNAV", or enterprise value divided by the value of the bitcoins, fell below 1. According to Strategy's site, the ratio is around 1.19.

In premarket trading, shares of Strategy and other crypto-companies such as Coinbase, Riot Platforms, and MARA Holdings, and mining companies Riot Platforms and MARA Holdings fell between 3-4 %.

According to CoinGecko, since the crypto market reached a size of $4.3 trillion, it has lost more than $1 trillion.

According to LSEG, exchange-traded fund (ETF) products backed by bitcoin spot saw record outflows in November of $3.43bn. In total, $21 billion have been invested in these products so far this year.

(source: Reuters)