Dogecoin Leads Gains in Major Cryptos Ahead of Fed Meeting: IronNet Chair Keith Alexander on Russia Cyber Tensions

The crypto market advanced for a second day after plunging over the weekend. Russia and Biden Executive order is coming to a head.

Dogecoin Leads Gains in Major Cryptos Ahead of Fed Meeting

The crypto market advanced for a second day after plunging over the weekend.

Reported By Shaurya Malwa

Bitcoin held over the crucial $37,000 level on Wednesday. (TradingView)

The broader crypto market recorded its second day of growth ahead of a U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) statement on Wednesday. Prices of bitcoin, ether and other major cryptocurrencies rose as much as 7% in the past 24 hours, with memecoin Dogecoin leading gains among the biggest assets by market capitalization.

Terra’s LUNA tokens were among the only losers, posting a 4.6% decline, data from analytics tool CoinGecko showed.

Major cryptocurrencies continued the second day of recovery on Wednesday. (TradingView)

Wednesday’s Fed meeting may reveal the bank’s stance on the timing of an interest-rate increase that many observers expect will come in March.The Fed has said it will tighten monetary policy with up to four hikes this year to keep inflation in check, prompting a sell-off in asset markets across the globe during the last few months. Bitcoin fell as much as 25% in the past month, while the crypto market has lost upward of $1 trillion in market capitalization in the same period.

Some analysts say a tightened policy could see investors flee into safer assets, which could, in turn, lead to a further drop in cryptocurrency prices.

“If the regulator tightens its rhetoric and announces the upcoming rate hike as early as March, all risky assets, including cryptocurrencies, could suffer significantly,” Alex Kuptsikevich, a senior financial analyst at FxPro, said in an email to CoinDesk.

Bitcoin held above $37,000 in European morning hours on Wednesday after dropping to under $33,500 on Monday, a move that caused the majors to fall as much as 25% at the time. The market has since recovered, with bitcoin, Solana (SOL), and ether rebounding to last week’s price levels.

Tokens of some layer 1 blockchains led gains outside of the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization. Polygon (MATIC) and Near (NEAR) have surged over 11% in 24 hours as investor demand rebounded after Monday’s drop.

Prices of MATIC were buoyed by the appointment of ex-Youtube gaming head Ryan Wyatt as CEO of Polygon Studios, a development lab that supports the creation of blockchain games and non-fungible tokens on the Polygon network. Wyatt previously led YouTube’s virtual- and augmented-reality projects and is expected to structure partnerships and investments in the Polygon ecosystem.

MATIC hit resistance at $1.60 after a surge in the past 24 hours. (TradingView)

Some traders said a correlation between crypto prices and risky assets such as technology stocks exists as they share a similar set of investors.

“Crypto is owned by the same people that own growth stocks,” Haseeb Qureshi, founder of crypto investment fund Dragonfly Capital, said in a telephone interview. “When they start cutting risk, they cut back on crypto. That’s how the correlation is built.”

Cause for concern may be short-lived. “[There are] lots of reasons to believe that the secular macro rate of interest is still low. Interest rates are low because of incremental technology growth. Crypto is one of the few things that people realize has broad growth potential,” Qureshi said.

MOSCOW, Jan 26 (Reuters) – Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday that Moscow did not want talks over Ukraine and its own security concerns to be made longer by including the European Union or the Organisation of Security and Cooperation in Europe in them.

He made the comments to the State Duma or lower house of parliament.

Lavrov also reiterated Moscow’s stance that it would take unspecified “appropriate measures” if it did not receive a constructive answer from the United States and NATO on security guarantees it is demanding.

Russia is expecting Washington to respond in writing this week to its proposals for guarantees. (Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber and Vladimir Soldatkin; Writing by Alexander Marrow Editing by Andrew Osborn)

Exit mobile version