Connect with us

Finance

UPDATE 1-Bitcoin ‘halving’ has occurred, says CoinGecko

Avatar

Published

on

UPDATE 1-Bitcoin 'halving' has occurred, says CoinGecko

(Adds halving completion to paragraphs 1-2)

By Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON, April 19 (Reuters) –

Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, completed its “halving” on Friday, a phenomenon that occurs about every four years, according to CoinGecko, a cryptocurrency data and analytics company.

Bitcoin was fairly stable immediately afterwards, falling 0.47% to $63,747.

Bitcoin enthusiasts had been eagerly awaiting the ‘halving’ – a change in the cryptocurrency’s underlying technology designed to slow the rate at which new bitcoins are created.

The halving was written into the bitcoin code at its inception by pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto as a way to slow the rate at which bitcoins are created.

Chris Gannatti, global head of research at asset manager WisdomTree, which markets bitcoin exchange-traded funds, called the halving “one of the biggest events in crypto this year.”

For some crypto fans, the halving will underline the value of bitcoin as an increasingly scarce commodity. Nakamoto has limited the supply of bitcoins to 21 million tokens. But skeptics see it as little more than a technical change that speculators are talking about to inflate the price of the virtual currency.

The operation works by halving the rewards cryptocurrency miners receive for creating new tokens, making it more expensive for them to put new bitcoins into circulation.

It follows a surge in Bitcoin’s price to a record high of $73,803.25 in March, after spending much of 2023 slowly recovering from 2022’s dramatic decline. On Thursday, the world’s largest cryptocurrency traded at $63,800.

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are buoyed by excitement surrounding the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s decision in January to approve spot exchange-traded bitcoin funds, as well as expectations that central banks will cut interest rates.

Previous halvings took place in 2012, 2016 and 2020. Some crypto fans point to subsequent price increases as a sign that Bitcoin’s next halving will increase its price, but many analysts are skeptical.

“We do not expect any price increases for bitcoin after the halving as it is already priced in,” JP Morgan analysts wrote this week.

They expect the price of bitcoin to fall after the halving because it is “overbought” and venture capital funding for the crypto industry is “moderate” this year.

Financial regulators have long warned that bitcoin is a risky asset, with limited real-world use, although more and more regulators have started approving bitcoin-linked trading products.

Andrew O’Neill, a crypto analyst at S&P Global, said he was “somewhat skeptical about the lessons to be learned in terms of price predictions from previous halvings.”

“It’s just one factor in a multitude of factors that can affect price,” he said.

Bitcoin has struggled to find direction since March’s record highs and has fallen over the past two weeks due to geopolitical tensions and expectations that central banks will keep interest rates higher as long as global markets are jittery.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft, Kanjyik Ghosh and Urvi Dugar; Editing by Tommy Reggiori Wilkes, Toby Chopra and Cynthia Osterman)