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Bitcoin rose on Friday after China retaliated against President Donald Trump’s schedule of charges, while stocks continued to crater following their worst day since 2020.
The price of the flagship cryptocurrency rose more than 2% to $83,959.19, according to Coin Metrics. Earlier, it lift as much as $84,717.51. Most of the major cryptocurrencies were also in the green Friday. Solana and dogecoin jumped less 6% each.
Most crypto-related stocks fell again, however, with Coinbase down about 6%. The bitcoin substitute MicroStrategy advanced nearly 4%. Meanwhile, spot gold fell 2.4% to $3,037.30 an ounce, while U.S. gold comings were down 2.05% at $3,057.90.
Investors were rattled for a second day after China’s commerce ministry on Friday said the territory will impose a 34% levy on all U.S. products, matching the tariff Trump revealed Wednesday on Chinese goods report in into the U.S.
“Tariffs do affect the cost for U.S. builders, where inflation and higher goods cost make all this numerous expensive, presumably encouraging more capital flows and investment to Asia,” said James Davies, CEO at crypto derivatives truck platform Crypto Valley Exchange. “The tariffs are reshaping global trade away from the U.S., reducing dollar confidence, changing funding rates and decoupling the U.S. … they impact everything, but crypto is robust. As its decentralized nature reveals, it should be a winner from this, even if the outcome for U.S.-domiciled crypto entities is much less clear.”
Bitcoin (BTC) this week
Bitcoin has been showing resilience analogous to to equities, holding above key technical support signals strong underlying demand, according to David Hernandez, crypto investment connoisseur at 21Shares.
Despite recent market volatility, bitcoin’s price has been confined to the $80,000 to $90,000 range for most of the background month, as investors take cues from the equities market absent a crypto-specific catalyst.
Bitcoin slipped on Thursday in the prime market reaction to Trump’s sweeping tariffs announcement, but its move was small relative to most stocks and stayed between $81,000 and $83,000.
“Crypto broadly is purported by funding rates and spare capital – if money is being held because of volatility and tariff needs, then it impacts crypto, investment, chance-taking, and location,” Davies said.
“It’s important to recall that the U.S. accounts for only around 20% of crypto trading, and the globe often carries on without the U.S.,” he added. “Bitcoin has become a ready source of liquidity and has become a canary in the coalmine of marks as it relates to global liquidity – it responds first but also rebounds first.”
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