Search Site

Honda shares soar 16%

The surge came after the auto giant announced a $7bn buyback.

Mubadala acquires stakes from GHH

It acquired an 80 percent stake in Global Medical Supply Chain.

ADNOC Drilling closes JV

It is a JV between ADNOC Drilling, SLB and Patterson UTI.

Boeing to boost 787 production

The firm will invest$1bn to ramp up production in South Carolina.

ADNOC signs deal with PETRONAS

Under the agreement, ADNOC will supply 1m tons of LNG per year.

Bitcoin crash tears through investor confidence

Bitcoin price at one stage this week plummeted to $25,500 -- less than half of its record price in November last year.
  • The world watched on Friday as the price of Bitcoin first dropped below $40,000 for the second time this month
  • It then slid further to go under $39,000, a level it had not seen since August 2 last year, when it had closed at $38,191

The price of Bitcoin crashed on Friday, January 21, to levels that it had not seen for more than five months, leading to further panic among investors whose enthusiasm had led the cryptocurrency to hit a historic high in November last year.

The world watched as the price of Bitcoin first dropped below $40,000 for the second time this month, then slid further to go under $39,000, a level it had not seen since August 2 last year, when it had closed at $38,191.

At the time of the filing of this report, the price of a single Bitcoin was hovering around the $39,100 mark, having lost more than 40 percent of its value since its $67,582.60 peak on November 8 last year.

The dip came even as market indices across the world headed southward on global cues like inflation, supply chain crises, and the recent hawkish stance taken by the US Federal Reserve.

It also came within a day of the central bank of Russia called for a complete ban on cryptocurrencies.

The downward trend seemed to have been predicted by a recent International Monetary Fund (IMF) analysis that claimed cryptocurrency prices are increasingly moving in consonance with stock prices, meaning currencies like Bitcoin were no more the best way to hedge their bets against the vagaries of the stock-market.

“The increased and sizeable co-movement and spillovers between crypto and equity markets indicate a growing interconnectedness between the two asset classes that permits the transmission of shocks that can destabilize financial markets,” warned the IMF in its analysis, published a mere 10 days before Friday’s Bitcoin crash.

The global body suggested that it was not time for a “comprehensive, coordinated global regulatory framework to guide national regulation and supervision and mitigate the financial stability risks stemming from the crypto ecosystem.”

Twitter pokes fun

Meanwhile, cryptocurrency enthusiasts in general and those bitcoin in particular took to social media platforms like Twitter to lighten the mood amid the gloom of the dip that was encapsulated by hashtags like #cryptocrash and #BitcoinCrash.

One user had the abyss in mind:

Another Twitter user with a darker sense of humor posted this:

A third user tried to look at the apparently brighter side of things with this meme: