Investing.com-- Bitcoin price rose slightly on Thursday, though remained close to a trading range seen through most of the week amid anticipation of more cues on U.S. interest rates and fears of more regulatory scrutiny against cryptocurrencies. Meanwhile, former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced today.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency climbed 1.11% over the past 24 hours and traded at $70,747.7 by 13:09 ET (17:09 GMT).
Bitcoin traded rangebound for two weeks after rushing to record highs earlier in March, as slowing capital flows into the recently-approved spot exchange-traded funds suggested that enthusiasm over the cryptocurrency was now cooling.
Pressure from the dollar, which shot up to one-month highs this week, also limited any major gains in Bitcoin, especially as dovish comments from major global central banks saw traders largely prefer the greenback as a high-yielding, low-risk currency.
Bitcoin price under pressure before PCE data, Fed signals
Markets were now focused squarely on PCE price index data- the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, which is due on Friday, and is likely to factor into the bank’s outlook on interest rates.
While the Fed is still projecting 75 basis points of rate cuts in 2024, any signs of sticky inflation could potentially tighten that outlook. Higher-for-longer interest rates bode poorly for Bitcoin, given that the token usually thrives in high-liquidity, risk-heavy markets.
After the PCE data, Fed officials Jerome Powell and Mary Daly are also set to speak at separate events later on Friday. Any more cues on the Fed’s stance on interest rates and inflation will be closely watched, especially as other Fed officials struck a somewhat hawkish tone this week.
Governor Christopher Waller said on Wednesday that the bank was in no hurry to begin trimming interest rates, citing sticky inflation and enough headroom from a strong U.S. economy to keep monetary conditions tight.
FTX Founder Sam Bankman-Fried Sentenced
Sam Bankman-Fried, the former CEO of FTX, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for the fraud and conspiracy scheme that caused his once prominent crypto exchange to fail. SBF was also fined $11 billion. Judge Lewis Kaplan announced the sentence in a Manhattan Federal court on Thursday after a two-hour hearing.
Judge Kaplan stated that Bankman-Fried never presented "a word of remorse for [the] commission of terrible crimes."
The sentence was less than the 40 to 50 years in prison that prosecutors had reportedly requested but significantly more than the five to six-year jail term the defense team had argued for.
The sentencing followed a monthlong trial in November, during which Bankman-Fried was found guilty of seven charges tied to the collapse of FTX and the disappearance of approximately $10 billion in customer deposits.
SEC-Coinbase suit rattles crypto
Sentiment towards crypto markets was also rattled by a key development in the Securities and Exchange Commission's lawsuit against crypto exchange Coinbase Global Inc (NASDAQ:COIN).
A U.S. judge ruled that the lawsuit, which was announced in 2023, can move forward, but dismissed one claim the SEC had made against Coinbase.
The SEC recently won a major legal victory against XRP token issuer Ripple, and was reportedly seeking $2 billion in penalties from the firm.
But the SEC-Coinbase suit is a key point of focus for crypto markets, given that it could potentially determine whether crypto tokens are governed by U.S. securities law.
This uncertainty also kept Bitcoin trading in a tight range.
But despite its treading water for two weeks, Bitcoin was still set for an over 50% gain in the first quarter of 2024, boosted chiefly by increased capital flows after the U.S. approval of spot ETFs earlier this year.
By comparison, the S&P 500 was up 11% in Q1, while gold was up about 6.5%.
Bitcoin, Ether may see increased volatility ahead of $15bn options expiration
The upcoming quarterly expiration of bitcoin and ether options contracts, valued at several billion dollars, could trigger bullish market volatility, market watchers observed.
This Friday at 08:00 UTC, Deribit, the biggest cryptocurrency options exchange, is set to settle contracts worth $15.2 billion.
Of this, $9.5 billion or 62% pertains to bitcoin options, with ether options making up the remainder. According to Deribit, this $15 billion expiration is among the largest in its history, erasing about 40% to 43% of the total notional open interest for both bitcoin and ether.
Deribit's Chief Commercial Officer, Luuk Strijers, noted that a significant volume of options expiring in-the-money (ITM) could potentially push market volatility higher.
[Ambar Warrick contributed to this report]