Bitcoin falls the most in a month following red-hot rally
“I think that $14,000 is a very key threshold,” said Moya. “Once that level is taken out, there is going to be a lot more upside here.”

Bitcoin’s scorching rally lost steam on Wednesday amid widespread risk aversion, falling the most in a month.
The world’s biggest cryptocurrency by market value slumped 3.1% to $13,201 as of 2:40 p.m. in New York. Alternative coins including Litecoin and Monero also posted declines, while the Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index dropped 3.7%.
“This broad, risk-aversion-trading session is triggering widespread panic selling, which is seeing every risky asset, like gold and Bitcoin, really start to plummet,” said Edward Moya, a senior market analyst at Oanda Corp.

Wednesday’s high of $13,857 only narrowly exceeded Bitcoin’s most recent peak, set in June 2019. While some chartists say Bitcoin could be forming a bearish double-top pattern, it also could be taking a breather after its 14-day relative strength index reading passed 70, signifying the coin was overbought.
“I think that $14,000 is a very key threshold,” said Moya. “Once that level is taken out, there is going to be a lot more upside here.”
But Bitcoin advocates say the coin’s decline may not be cause for concern. Many argue cryptocurrencies -- and Bitcoin in particular -- could eventually stand to benefit in an era of rampant central-bank money printing and the potential for an inflationary spike.
“The way we see it, something unexpected has to reverse increasing adoption of Bitcoin as digital store-of-value such as gold, or the price has few options but to rise,” Mike McGlone, a strategist with Bloomberg Intelligence, wrote in a note.
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