Bitcoin fell briefly below $30,000 (€28,427) for the first time in 10 months on Tuesday, according to data site CoinMarketCap, while cryptocurrencies overall have lost nearly $800 billion (€758 billion) in market value in the past month as investors fret about tightening monetary policy.
Compared with the Federal Reserve's last tightening cycle which began in 2016, crypto is a much bigger market, raising concerns about its interconnectivity with the rest of the financial system.
In November, the most popular cryptocurrency Bitcoin hit an all-time high of more than $68,000 (€64,435), pushing the value of the crypto market to $3 trillion (€2.84 trillion), according to CoinGecko.
That figure was $1.51 trillion (€1.42 trillion) on Tuesday.
Bitcoin accounts for nearly $600 billion (€569 billion) of that value, followed by Ethereum with a $285 billion (€270 billion) market cap.
Although cryptocurrencies have enjoyed explosive growth, the market is still relatively small.
The US equity markets, for example, are worth $49 trillion (€46.4 trillion) while the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association has pegged the outstanding value of US fixed income markets at $52.9 trillion (€50.1 trillion) as of the end of 2021.
Cryptocurrency started out as a retail phenomenon, but institutional interest from exchanges, companies, banks, hedge funds and mutual funds is growing fast.
While data on the proportion of retail versus institutional investors in the crypto market is hard to come by, Coinbase, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, said institutional and retail investors each accounted for about 50 per cent of the assets on its platform in the fourth quarter.
Its institutional clients traded $1.14 trillion (€1.08 trillion)
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