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Le Bitcoin chute sous les 20 000 $ pour la première fois depuis décembre 2020 ; l’Ether tombe sous les 1 000 $
La chute continue des Marchés financiers traditionnels et la panique autour des plateformes de prêt de Crypto ont propulsé le Bitcoin dans la tranche des 10 pour la première fois en plus de 18 mois.

Bitcoin (BTC) est passé sous la barre des 20 000 $ pour la première fois depuis décembre 2020, perdant 9,5 % au cours des dernières 24 heures. Au moment de la publication, la plus grande Cryptomonnaie en termes de capitalisation boursière s'échangeait autour de 18 984,1 $ après avoir atteint un creux de 18 739,50 $.
Éther (ETH), la deuxième plus grande Crypto, a également poursuivi son déclin, chutant de 9,78 % à environ 992 $ au moment de la publication.
La panique Crypto – qui a débuté il y a quelques semaines avec l'effondrement de l'écosystème Terra et s'est ensuite propagée à la plateforme Celsius – s'est propagée au fonds spéculatif Three Arrow Capital, qui aurait eu sa garantie liquidée par le prêteur de Crypto monnaie BlockFi.
Sur les Marchés traditionnels, les actions américaines ont enregistré de nouvelles ventes massives jeudi, le Nasdaq ayant chuté de 4,1 % et le S&P 500 de 3,25 %, avant une légère reprise vendredi. Sur la semaine, le Nasdaq et le S&P 500 ont tous deux reculé d'environ 6 %.
Amitoj Singh a contribué à ce rapport.
Greg Ahlstrand
Originally from California, I've been Asia-based since 1999, headquartered in Hong Kong and Jakarta and traveling throughout the Asean countries, Japan, Korea, the Chinese mainland and Taiwan for stories. Made Australia a couple of times, too.
I started my journalism career as a news assistant at the Fresno Bee in Central California while studying the subject in school after the Navy. I went from launching and recovering helicopters on flight decks at sea to recovering papers fresh off the printer in the Bee's basement and launching them onto the editors' desks, whose editors had long since gone home for the night. Eventually, they let me stop delivering the paper and start writing stuff in it. My first beat was night cops: liquor store robberies, gang shootings, fatal car crashes (almost always alcohol related). It was an education.
I am, as implied above, a U.S. Navy veteran. I served in seagoing helicopter squadrons as an aviation anti-submarine warfare technician throughout the Asia Pacific region and the Indian Ocean. I have a significant number of sailor stories to tell. I have no significant crypto holdings.
Among my hobbies are welding, building stuff, home remodelling, (or knocking a house down and starting from scratch if it's too far gone to fix), riding horses and rebuilding old tractors. So far I've done a Ford 8N and a Ford 9N. It's slow going, because I live in Hong Kong and the tractors are in California, so I only get to work on them once or twice a year, for a week or two at a time - and that was before covid.
I love my Lab, Cooper, whom my neighbors asked me to adopt two years ago when they moved back to Shanghai from Hong Kong. Cooper and I actually planned the whole thing -- we've known each other almost his whole life -- but his first parents are unaware of the conspiracy; and they send him Christmas presents every year.

James Rubin
James Rubin was CoinDesk's Co-Managing Editor, Markets team based on the West Coast. He has written and edited for the Milken Institute, TheStreet.com and the Economist Intelligence Unit, among other organizations. He is also the co-author of the Urban Cyclist's Survival Guide. He owns a small amount of bitcoin.
