By Eric Lam
(Bloomberg) – Bitcoin slid after a cryptic tweet from Elon Musk apparently hinting at a potential split with the largest cryptocurrency, the latest post from the billionaire to buffet the tokenâs price.
The coin dropped as much as 5.4% and was trading at about $36,980 as of 7:05am in London. The decline dented this weekâs stabilisation in the crypto sector after a rout in May. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index retreated as much as 5.7%.
Musk has roiled Bitcoin and other digital tokens with a string of social media posts. Most notably, the tycoon last month reversed a decision to allow purchases of Tesla electric vehicles with Bitcoin, citing the environmental fallout of the energy required by the servers underpinning the cryptocurrency. That, plus harsh Chinese regulatory rhetoric, led to a plunge in the sector.
#Bitcoin đ pic.twitter.com/lNnEfMdtJf
â Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 4, 2021
In his latest tweet, Musk wrote â#Bitcoinâ with a broken heart emoji and a reference to a lyric from the popular song âIn the Endâ by Linkin Park.
His Twitter account has affected other parts of the market – Samsung Publishing, a shareholder in the producer of the âBaby Sharkâ viral YouTube song, surged this week after Musk tweeted about the jingle.
Bitcoin is about $28,000 shy of its mid-April record of almost $65,000. The biggest believers in crypto argue the token is consolidating before a run higher to new highs.
But Muskâs spotlight on environmental risks – and the way his tweets drive swings in prices – have hurt the narrative that the virtual currency is bound to win more mainstream adoption over time.
After suspending Bitcoin payments to Tesla, Musk later said that the company hadnât sold any of its holdings of the digital token – clarifying another of his tweets that raised questions about whether Tesla might have done so.
The repeated posts have fuelled speculation over just why the electric-car pioneer is issuing crypto missives.
Tesla in February disclosed a $1.5bn Bitcoin investment. In April, the firmâs earnings report showed it had sold 10% of its Bitcoin holdings.
Despite Mayâs rout, Bitcoin is up about 280% over the past year, while second-ranked Ether is up 1,000%. The Bloomberg crypto gauge has climbed about sixfold.
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