* Bitcoin, ether fall to 3-1/2-month low; other coins tumble
* China curbs come on heels of Musk tweets
* Price fall undermines bitcoin inflation hedge argument (Recasts first paragraph, adds new comment, updates prices)
By Tommy Wilkes, Sujata Rao and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK/LONDON, May 19 (Reuters) – Bitcoin and ether tumbled on Wednesday to 3-1/2 month lows, on track to post their largest one-day loss since March last year, in the wake of China’s move a day ago to ban financial and payment institutions from providing cryptocurrency services.
At one point during the meltdown, nearly $1 trillion was wiped off the cryptocurrency’s market capitalization.
In late morning trading, the market cap was at $1.65 trillion, according to data tracker CoinGecko.com
Bitcoin, the biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, had already been under pressure from a series of tweets from Tesla boss Elon Musk, but the news from China sent it further down, It hit a 3-1/2-month low of $30,066.
The cryptocurrency has dropped 54% from a record high of $64,895 hit on April 14. It is also heading for its first monthly decline since November 2018.
“Bitcoin’s sharp price drop should come as no shock to the market,” said Gavin Smith, chief executive officer of crypto consortium Panxora.
“Any asset which has risen as much as bitcoin over the past year can be expected to have pullbacks as some investors withdraw profits, like we’re currently seeing. While often a brilliant investment opportunity, traders must remember that Bitcoin is still an emerging asset class and will continue to experience large price swings,” he added.
Bitcoin’s decline whacked other crypto assets, with Ether , the coin linked to the ethereum blockchain network, dropping to $1,850, its weakest level since late Janury. It was last down 26% at $2,497. Since hitting a record high on May 12, ether has plummeted 57%.
Meme-based dogecoin also tumbled – losing nearly 26% to $0.35, according to Coingecko.
Shares in the crypto exchange Coinbase dropped 7.4% on Wednesday. Coinbase’s share price has nearly halved from the peak hit on the day of its direct listing in April.
Tesla Inc. also fell, down 3.8% at $555.83.
Cryptocurrency price declines last week were sparked by Musk’s reversal on Tesla accepting bitcoin as payment. His subsequent tweets caused further confusion over whether the carmaker had shed its holdings of the coin.
China’s announcement on Tuesday banning financial institutions and payment companies from providing services related to cryptocurrency transactions exacerbated selling. China also warned investors against speculative crypto trading.
“The crypto markets are currently processing a cascade of news that fuel the bear case for price development,” said Ulrik Lykke, executive director at crypto hedge fund ARK36.
Some cryptowatchers, however, predicted more losses ahead, noting the fall below $40,000 represented a breach of a key technical barrier that could trigger more selling.
A “widespread deleveraging” was sweeping through cryptocurrency markets, said Saxo Bank’s chief investment officer, Steen Jakobsen, calling the selloff deeper and more widespread than earlier episodes.
INFLATION HEDGE?
Investors may also be exiting bitcoin for gold, analysts at JPMorgan said, citing positioning data compiled on basis of open interest in CME bitcoin futures contracts.
This shows “the steepest and more sustained liquidation” in bitcoin futures since last October, they told clients, adding that it pointed to “continued retrenchment by institutional investors”.
The crypto asset selloff at a time when inflation fears are rising hurts the idea of the asset class as an inflation hedge.
Instead, more traditional hedges have been gaining ground, with gold up almost 6% this month.
The recent selloff in bitcoin and other digital currencies has sent market capitalisation of all cryptocurrencies to $1.7 trillion, down from the $2.5 trillion record hit earlier this month.
(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes, Sujata Rao in London, and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss in New York; Additional reporting by Stanley White and Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; Editing by Kim Coghill, Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Andrew Cawthorne)