For <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/cryptocurrencies/2021/12/31/after-record-year-bitcoin-faces-uncertain-2022-amid-more-potential-regulatory-pressure/" target="_blank">Bitcoin</a>, there’s only been one constant recently: decline after decline after decline. And the superlatives have piled up really quickly. With the US <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/2021/12/15/us-federal-reserve-to-quicken-taper-and-signals-three-rate-hikes-in-2022/" target="_blank">Federal Reserve</a> intending to withdraw stimulus from the market, riskier assets the world over have suffered. Bitcoin, the largest digital asset, extended its decline on Saturday, and has shed more than 50 per cent from its record high in November while adding further momentum to the meltdown in cryptocurrencies. It fell as low as $34,042.78 on Saturday, a drop of 7.2 per cent, before paring most of those losses. Other digital assets also slid, with Ethereum down 12 per cent. Solana and Cardano each fell at least 17 per cent, according to Coinbase. “Margin positions being liquidated caused a wave of additional sell pressure, as assets that had been held as collateral were forcibly sold to pay for margin loans,” said Hayden Hughes, chief executive officer at Alpha Impact in Singapore. Bitcoin’s decline since that November high has wiped out more than $600 billion in market value, and over $1 trillion has been lost from the aggregate crypto market. While there have been much larger percentage drawdowns for both Bitcoin and the aggregate market, this marks the second-largest decline in dollar terms for both, according to Bespoke Investment Group. “It gives an idea of the scale of value destruction that percentage declines can mask,” wrote Bespoke analysts in a note. “Crypto is, of course, vulnerable to these sorts of selloffs given its naturally higher volatility historically, but given how large market caps have gotten, the volatility is worth thinking about both in raw dollar terms as well as in percentage terms.” With the Fed’s intentions rocking both cryptocurrencies and stocks, a dominant theme has emerged in the digital-asset space: cryptos have twisted and turned in nearly exactly the same way as equities have. “Crypto is reacting to the same kind of dynamics that are weighing on risk-assets globally,” said Stephane Ouellette, chief executive and co-founder of institutional crypto-platform FRNT Financial. “Unfortunately for some of the mature projects like Bitcoin, there is so much cross-correlation within the crypto asset class it’s almost a certainty that it falls, at least temporarily in a broader alt-coin valuation contraction.” Crypto-centric stocks also dropped on Friday, with Coinbase Global at one point losing nearly 16 per cent and falling to its lowest level since its public debut in the spring of 2021, Bloomberg data show. MicroStrategy tumbled 18 per cent while the Securities and Exchange Commission said the company can’t strip out Bitcoin’s wild swings from the unofficial accounting measures it touts to investors. The enterprise software company’s pile of Bitcoin has effectively made its shares a proxy for the digital asset. Meanwhile, the Biden administration is preparing to release an initial government-wide strategy for digital assets as soon as next month and task federal agencies with assessing the risks and opportunities that they pose, according to people familiar with the matter. Antoni Trenchev, a Nexo co-founder and managing partner, cites Bitcoin’s correlation to the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100, which right now is near the highest in a decade. “Bitcoin is being battered by a wave of risk-off sentiment. For further cues, keep an eye on traditional markets,” he said. “Fear and unease among investors is palpable.” Take also the correlation between Bitcoin and Cathie Wood’s ARK Innovation ETF, a pandemic poster-child of speculative risk-taking. That correlation stands at around 60 per cent year-to-date, versus about 14 per cent for the price of gold, according to Katie Stockton, founder and managing partner of Fairlead Strategies, a research firm focused on technical analysis. It’s “reminding us to categorise Bitcoin and altcoins as risk assets rather than safe havens", she said. Meanwhile, more than 239,000 traders had their positions closed on Friday, with liquidations totalling roughly $874m, according to data from Coinglass, a cryptocurrency futures trading and information platform. Although liquidations have spiked, the numbers are relatively muted when compared to previous declines, according to Noelle Acheson, head of market insights at Genesis Global Trading. Acheson points out that Bitcoin’s one-week skew, which compares the cost of bearish options to bullish ones, spiked to almost 15 per cent on Wednesday compared to an average of about 6 per cent in the past seven days. “This flagged a jump in bearish sentiment, in line with overall market jitters given the current macro uncertainty,” she said. Kara Murphy, chief investment officer at Kestra Investment Management, said cryptocurrencies have a life of their own but that the recent slump is rational.