Cryptocurrency prices played follow the leader on Monday, dropping in the red as macroeconomic forces appeared to affect digital assets. With bitcoin (BTC) trending downward, altcoin prices followed suit, but there were some notable exceptions.
Cryptocurrency prices played follow the leader on Monday, dropping in the red as macroeconomic forces appeared to affect digital assets.
With bitcoin (BTC) trending downward, altcoin prices followed suit, but there were some notable exceptions.
Double-digit gains
EOS and chiliz (CHZ) both posted double-digit gains. Chiliz spiked in the hour after conventional markets closed in North America. (All figures based on CoinMarketCap data.)
For the most part, though, price declines prevailed as bitcoin fell below $22,000 and stock markets declined.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and NASDAQ, which contains many tech companies that tend to influence crypto, were down modestly.
FTX exchange coin plunges
The FTX crypto exchange’s coin (FTT) plunged after the company behind it got into hot water with the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
The regulator issued FTX’s US subsidiary a cease-and-desist letter on Friday over alleged misleading statements regarding federally insured accounts. (The FDIC insures bank deposits, excluding cryptocurrencies and stocks.)
FTX president Brett Harrison had stated in a subsequently deleted tweet that “direct deposits from employers to FTX US are stored in individually FDIC-insured bank accounts in the users’ names,” the Verge reported.
The tweet also said that “stocks are held in FDIC-insured and SIPC [Security Investor Protection Corporation]-insured brokerage accounts.”
After complying with FDIC’s request to delete the tweet, Harrison defended it.
Clash with FDIC
“The tweet was written in response to questions raised on twitter regarding whether direct USD deposits from employers were held at insured banks (i.e. Evolve Bank),” he wrote.
But the FDIC argued that the comment falsely suggested that FTX and investors funds were insured by the FDIC.
“We really didn’t mean to mislead anyone, and we didn’t suggest that FTX US itself, or that crypto/non-fiat assets, benefit from FDIC insurance,” Harrison wrote in another tweet.
“I hope this provides clarity on our intentions. Happy to work directly with the FDIC on these important topics.”
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