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Bitcoin Breaks Below $50K as Market Sell-Off Continues

Bitcoin's price fell about $4,300 in the last 24 hours.

Bitcoin has fallen below the $50,000 psychological support line, hitting its lowest point in 48 days.

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At around 17:00 UTC on Thursday, bitcoin's (BTC) price fell from around $54,900 to $51,500 before the markets inflicted another sell-off to $48,300, according to Bitstamp exchange data. Prices are currently hovering around $49,200, representing an 8% drop or loss of about $4,300 over the previous 24-hours, according to CoinDesk's bitcoin price page.

"On-chain data suggests we're still in a long-term bull market," Ki Young Ju, CEO of South Korea-based blockchain analytics firm CryptoQuant, told CoinDesk. "In the short term, we might have a correction and going sideways in a broad range since the market is over-heated among retail investors."

Bitcoin is on track to close out its biggest weekly drop since February when prices fell 21% before making a sharp recovery and breaking to all-time highs near $64,900.

A loss of the 100-point daily moving average at around $49,400 may open up steeper losses to around $46,000, according to technical analysis theory.

Other cryptocurrencies are also experiencing sharp sells, with XRP and ether both down 13% and 7% respectively and binance coin is down 5.8%. Indeed, almost all of the assets in the CoinDesk 20 – the 20 cryptocurrencies making up the lion's share of the crypto market at eight significant exchanges – have fallen in price over the last 24 hours.

See also: Bitcoin Price Decline Deepens, Heads for Worst Week Since February

Sebastian Sinclair

Sebastian Sinclair is the market and news reporter for CoinDesk operating in the South East Asia timezone. He has experience trading in the cryptocurrency markets, providing technical analysis and covering news developments affecting the movements on bitcoin and the industry as a whole. He currently holds no cryptocurrencies.

Sebastian Sinclair