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The price of bitcoin hit a record high of $109,114.88 during intraday trading on January 20, the day of President Trump's inauguration, but has plummeted since and went as low as $83,741.94 during today's trading.
That's a 23.3 percent drop from the intraday record to today's low, though it was back over $84,000 as of this writing. Bitcoin had been above $100,000 as recently as February 7, and was over $96,000 on Monday this week.
Bitcoin's drop is part of a wider rout in which over $800 billion of nominal value "has been wiped off global cryptocurrency markets in recent weeks, as the enthusiasm that swept the crypto industry after Donald Trump's election victory last year ebbs away," the Financial Times wrote today.
Bitcoin hit a then-record of $89,623 in November, a week after the election, amid optimism about Trump's plans for crypto-friendly policies. It hit $100,000 for the first time in early December after Trump announced his planned nomination of Paul Atkins to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Trump made several early moves to support crypto. "After pouring tens of millions of dollars into Trump's 2024 campaign for president, the crypto industry has been paid back handsomely during his first week in the White House," CNBC wrote on January 25.
For example, the SEC rescinded a 2022 accounting rule "that forced banks to treat bitcoin and other tokens as a liability on their balance sheets," a change that is said to make it easier for "regulated institutions to adopt crypto as an asset class that they support on behalf of the clients."
Trump impact overestimated
But enthusiasm waned as crypto investors apparently expected Trump to do more to boost the market in the five weeks since his inauguration. Traders hoped the US would start buying bitcoin and "rapidly enact new rules to encourage large financial institutions to buy crypto," today's Financial Times article said.
"There has been a recalibration of expectations regarding the Trump administration's crypto stance," Gadi Chait, investment manager at Xapo Bank, told the Financial Times. Michael Dempsey, managing partner at venture capital firm Compound, was quoted as saying that many crypto enthusiasts "materially overestimated [Trump's] positive impact on the space."