Bitcoin is dropping fast as speculators cash out after its recent spike
- Bitcoin slumped more than 8% on Friday as speculators cashed out.
- The decline probably reflected profit-taking and algorithmic trading, according to one expert.
- Bitcoin had surged from $5,000 to more than $8,000 this month, but still trades well below its peak of $19,000 in December 2017.
- Watch bitcoin trade live.
Bitcoin slumped more than 8% to below $7,200 on Friday as investors cashed out following the cryptocurrency's breathless rise this year. The prices of other cryptocurrencies such as ethereum and litecoin slid by a similar amount, while bitcoin cash and ripple dropped around 12%.
The cryptocurrency's latest tumble probably reflected profit-taking and algorithmic trading exacerbating the decline, said Jehan Chu, co-founder of Kenetic Capital, in an interview with CNBC. The total market capitalization for the cryptocurrency industry has shrunk by about 9% to around $225 billion in the past day, according to data from CoinMarketCap.
The price of bitcoin had surged to nearly $8,200 earlier this week, more than doubling its value since the start of the year. There are several theories about what caused the spike, including the US-China trade war, growing institutional interest, an exodus from risky "alt-coins," a lawsuit against the owners of the Bitfinex exchange, and the hacking of the Binance exchange.
Given bitcoin's sharp rise, "it is no surprise we have seen a small adjustment," Marcus Swanepoel, CEO of Luno, a cryptocurrency company, said in a note. "Data will almost certainly show that a number of people who bought on the last major price rise will now be exiting at a price which covers their initial investment."
Bitcoin still trades more than 40% above its $5,000 level at the start of May. However, it remains well short of the $19,000 peak it reached in December 2017.