First Mover Asia: South Korea’s ‘Kimchi Premium’ Evaporates; Major Cryptos Tumble on Fed Minutes, Continued Global Uncertainty

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Good morning. Here’s what’s happening:

Prices: Bitcoin, ether and other major cryptos fell significantly amid continued macroeconomic turmoil and new evidence of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s move to hawkishness.

Insights: South Korea’s “kimchi premium” has largely evaporated, although the country’s climate for crypto has been favorable lately.

Technician’s take: BTC broke below a month-long uptrend, but the broad recovery off January lows remains intact.

Catch the latest episodes of CoinDesk TV for insightful interviews with crypto industry leaders and analysis. And sign up for First Mover,our daily newsletter putting the latest moves in crypto markets in context.

Prices

Bitcoin (BTC): $43,723 -4.8%

Ether (ETH): $3,216 -6.8%

Top Gainers

There are no gainers in CoinDesk 20 today.

Top Losers

Asset Ticker Returns Sector
Ethereum Classic ETC −12.9% Smart Contract Platform
Dogecoin DOGE −11.2% Currency
Filecoin FIL −10.9% Computing

Bitcoin, other cryptos slide

Crypto and equity markets haven’t always been in step in recent months.

But on Wednesday they were, following another day of macroeconomic turmoil stemming from Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and fresh evidence of the U.S. central bank’s transformation into a monetary hawk.

Bitcoin (BTC) was recently trading below $44,000, where it dropped earlier in the day less than a week after soaring over $47,000. The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization was off nearly 5%. Ether (ETH), the second-largest crypto by market cap, fell on even harder times, tumbling almost 7% to change hands just above $3,200.

All major altcoins in the CoinDesk top 20 by market cap, were even further in the red with SOL down over 10% and ADA and DOT each down about 8% at certain points. The meme coins DOGE and SHIB were off about 12% and 9%, respectively.

Meanwhile, U.S. equity markets fell, with the Nasdaq off 2.2%, following the release of minutes from the Federal Reserve’s March meeting in which governors discussed raising interest rates in half-point increments. Fed Chair Jerome Powell last week broached the possibility of a half-point hike as a way to tamp down inflation, which at nearly 8% has hit a four-decade high and could potentially increase as the conflict in Ukraine rages, sabotaging energy prices and global supply chains.

Brent crude oil, a widely regarded measure of energy prices, continued trading over $101 per barrel, a massive increase over the start of the year when it was priced at under $80 per barrel.

The U.S. and other countries that have criticized Russia’s aggression took steps to impose full sanctions against Russia’s largest financial services companies, including Sberbank, the country’s largest financial institution. The countries had previously only imposed partial sanctions on the companies. Sberbank, which holds about one-third of Russia’s assets, will now lack any contact with the U.S. banking system.

The sanctions are meant to cripple the Russian economy, which has been able to make debt payments from revenue it receives from energy sales and through limited access to foreign banking. The U.S. has urged European Union countries to ban the Russian oil and gas imports, upon which they are heavily dependent.

In an interview with CoinDesk TV’s “First Mover” program, Scott Freeman, co-founder and partner of financial services firm JST Capital, suggested the global unrest was hurting bitcoin’s price, despite major buys over the past 10 days by Terra’s Luna Foundation and MicroStrategy (MSTR), which purchased over $190 million in the crypto this week. “It’s hard to lay a finger on the movement of bitcoin right now,” Freeman said. “At the end of the day, we believe there are business macro themes in the environment where people are just not looking to put risk-on right now. People look for opportunities to sell and to profit.”

But, Freeman added: “We think, longer term, bitcoin and crypto are really good places to put some percentage of your portfolio.”

Markets

S&P 500: 4,481 -0.9%

DJIA: 34,496 -0.4%

Nasdaq: 13,888 -2.2%

Gold: $1,925 +0.2%

Insights

Bitcoin’s kimchi premium evaporates

Bitcoin traded at a discount of 3.2% relative to the U.S. dollar on South Korean markets last week after the launch of new crypto regulations, crypto market data firm Kaiko noted.

That’s a market shift from prior years, when South Korea’s unique regulatory framework, which restricts cross-border capital transfers for foreigners, led to a “kimchi premium” – a gap between bitcoin prices on Korean crypto exchanges compared with global counterparts. Bitcoin traded at over 20% higher at one point last year. The premium also reflects local market demand.

However, for the first time in years this premium has turned into a discount as traders anticipated the adoption of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) “travel rule,” Kaiko said.

The rule requires crypto service providers to collect and disclose customer information for all transactions above a particular threshold.

The Kimchi premium’s recent flip to a discount might mark the end – for now anyway – of an iconic crypto arbitrage trade, one that several traders and firms, including FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, exploited in its heyday.

Crypto in South Korea has been riding favorable winds lately.

Last week, The Korean Herald reported that SK Square, the investment arm of South Korean conglomerate SK Group, would spend 2 trillion won (US$1.6 billion) in the next three years on semiconductors and blockchain.

SK Square’s CEO and Vice Chairman Park Jung-ho noted the “high growth potential” of “chips and blockchain,” in comments to the newspaper. Rising demand for chips and other components that enable blockchain platforms are a sometimes overlooked benefit of the industry’s rapid growth.

Separately, SK Square, part of the SK Group behemoth of 95 separate companies, has established a task force to launch what would be the first token of its kind by a South Korean top 10 conglomerate, often called a chaebol.

The country’s newly elected president has promised crypto-friendly policies that include legal measures to confiscate crypto profits gained through illegitimate means and to ensure their return to victims.

Technician’s take

Bitcoin Extends Pullback Toward $40K-$43K Support

First Mover Asia: South Korea's 'Kimchi Premium' Evaporates; Major Cryptos Tumble on Fed Minutes, Continued Global Uncertainty

Bitcoin daily chart shows support/resistance (Damanick Dantes/CoinDesk, TradingView)

Bitcoin (BTC) remains in pullback mode after failing to break above the $48,000 resistance level last week.

BTC was down by as much as 4% over the past 24 hours, which is less than some popular alternative cryptocurrencies (altcoins), indicating a lower appetite for risk among crypto traders.

On intraday charts, BTC broke below a month-long uptrend. That means short-term sellers are in control, especially after the breakout level around $45,000 was rejected on Tuesday.

Recent breakdowns on the charts have confirmed negative momentum signals, although pullbacks appear to be limited. For now, the broader recovery from January lows remains intact.

Important events

Bitcoin 2022 conference Miami

9:30 a.m. HKT/SGT(1:30 a.m. UTC): Australia imports/exports (MoM/Feb.)

1 p.m. HKT/SGT(5 a.m. UTC): Japan leading economic index (Feb. preliminary)

CoinDesk TV

In case you missed it, here is the most recent episode of “First Mover” on CoinDesk TV:

Treasury Secretary Yellen to Deliver First Crypto Speech Tomorrow, Musk’s Twitter Board Appointment and More

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen delivered her first official speech to focus on digital assets. Prior to Yellen’s remarks, James Czerniawski of Americans for Prosperity joined “First Mover” to share his thoughts on what Yellen would address. Plus, Scott Freeman of JST Capital and insights provided crypto markets analysis and Macro Hive’s Bilaf Hafeez discussed Elon Musk’s Twitter board appointment.

Headlines

HSBC Starts Metaverse Fund for Private Banking Clients in Asia: The Metaverse Discretionary Strategy portfolio aims to capture opportunities arising from the next iteration of the internet, the bank said.

Block Notifies 8.2M Customers After Breach of Cash App Investings: A former employee improperly accessed reports related to U.S. customer accounts. The reports did not contain personally identifiable information.

Near Protocol Raises $350M: It’s Near’s second nine-figure raise this year.

Luna Foundation Guard Adds Nearly $230M of Bitcoin to Stack: The foundation now has bigger exposure to bitcoin than the U.S. electric-car maker Tesla.

Dogecoin Rallies Again After Elon Musk Joins Twitter Board: The news comes one day after the Tesla CEO disclosed his ownership of 9.2% of Twitter, making him the company’s largest individual shareholder.

Longer reads

The Bigger Problem With Axie Infinity:The $620 million Ronin exploit isn’t the half of it; play-to-earn ain’t free.

Today’s crypto explainer: What Is LUNA and UST? A Guide to the Terra Ecosystem

Other voices: Mark Cuban is ‘very bullish’ on the upcoming Ethereum ‘merge.’ Here’s why he says the upgrade is so important for the cryptocurrency

Said and heard

“The Treasury spokeswoman said the action taken this week would create additional challenges for Russia’s financial system. The Russian government has already imposed capital controls restricting the flow of money in and out of the country.” (The New York Times) … “It is imperative that each and every participant in the U.S. crypto market let their voice be heard. The [Securities and Exchange Commission] is accepting comments on its proposal through April 18 and cannot finalize the rule until each and every concern is considered and addressed. And concerns abound.” (ConsenSys lawyer Bill Hughes, for CoinDesk) … “The money-transfer service boomed during the [COVID-19] pandemic, when people avoided ATMs and replaced cash and checks with digital money transfers. Zelle recorded some 1.8 billion transactions in 2021 totaling $490 billion, both more than double their pre-pandemic levels.” (The Wall Street Journal) … “If you have a group of people that hold the same token, what can they do? They can move anywhere, both physically [in real life] and online URL. So what a really savvy brand can do is say, “Okay, cool, here’s my community, here’s my customer base.” The best strategy is actually not to sell NFTs. It’s to give them away for free. Give them away, and put them in the hands of your best customers.” (Jump founder Jeff Kauffman)

First Mover Asia: South Korea’s ‘Kimchi Premium’ Evaporates; Major Cryptos Tumble on Fed Minutes, Continued Global Uncertainty

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