It was a bearish start to the week, with the crypto majors giving up gains from earlier in the day. A late NASDAQ pullback weighed.
It was a bearish start to the week for the crypto market. Bitcoin (BTC) fell for a second consecutive day, with Ethereum (ETH) and Binance Coin (BNB) giving up gains in the final hour of the day.
Crypto news failed to ruffle investor feathers despite SEC Chair Gary Gensler chatter and the Coinbase downgrade.
However, the US equity markets and crude oil prices did influence the crypto market.
The NASDAQ 100 gave up early gains, with a spike in crude oil prices contributing to the pullback. Bitcoin and the broader market tracked the NASDAQ into negative territory, while WTI ended the day up 1.81% to $109.57.
Following a $24 billion decline on Sunday, the total crypto market cap slipped by $9.17 billion on Monday.
A mixed session saw the market cap hit a high of $942.7 billion before retreating.
The modest decline left the total crypto market cap down $381 billion for the current month.
Monday’s pullback reflected investor sentiment toward the influence of crude oil prices on inflation. Plans to roll out fresh G7 sanctions on Russia drove crude oil prices northwards on fears of more supply disruption.
Further supply chain disruption could push inflation higher and remove hope of a shift in the Fed’s interest rate projections.
On Monday, SOL fell by 2.29% to lead the way down, with BTC (-1.49%), DOGE (-1.25%), and XRP (-1.62%) also struggling.
ETH (-0.49%), BNB (-0.17%), and ADA (-1.02%) ended the day with relatively modest losses.
From the CoinMarketCap top 100, TEZOS (XTZ) rallied by 10.78%, with Apecoin (APE), Chiliz (CHZ), and Stacks (STX) leading the broader market.
This morning, 24-hour total crypto liquidations eased back from Monday levels.
Going into the Tuesday session, total 24-hour liquidations stood at $137 million, down from $145 million on Monday.
Liquidated traders over the last 24 hours also eased back. At the time of writing, liquidated traders stood at 57,317.
With 24-hour liquidations easing back, liquidations over one hour slid below the one million level, also crypto positive.
According to Coinglass, one-hour liquidations stood at $0.86 million. On Monday morning, one-hour liquidations had stood at $12.71 million.
With over 28 years of experience in the financial industry, Bob has worked with various global rating agencies and multinational banks. Currently he is covering currencies, commodities, alternative asset classes and global equities, focusing mostly on European and Asian markets.