Bitcoin slips as Fed chair speculation hits risky assets

BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 12:10 AM EST

SINGAPORE, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Bitcoin slumped to a two-month low on Friday as speculation the next chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve might tighten up on cash in the financial system hit cryptocurrencies and lifted the dollar.

Cryptos are having a rough time ?in what was once hoped to be a golden era of flows and friendly regulation under ?President Donald Trump, with the market-leading bitcoin losing a third of its ?value since striking record highs in October.

It traded 2.5% ?lower on Friday at $82,300, ?extending the previous session's drop and heading towards a fourth straight month of losses, its ?longest losing streak for eight years.

Selling gathered ?pace on intensifying speculation that former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh was about to be anointed as Trump's pick to ?replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

Warsh has ?called for ?regime change at the central bank and wants, among other things, a smaller Fed balance sheet. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have been regarded ?as beneficiaries of a large balance sheet, having tended to rally while the Fed greased money markets with liquidity - a support for speculative assets.

"As you start to talk about pulling the rug out from underneath that ... all the hedges against balance sheet expansion that people have been going ?for - ?gold, crypto, obviously bonds start to sell a little bit," said Damien Boey, portfolio strategist at Wilson Asset Management in Sydney.

Ether also ?skidded to a two-month low and traded 2.9% lower at $2,735.48.

Cryptocurrencies have been struggling for direction since last year's tumble and have been left behind by big rallies in gold and stocks that, on occasion, they had tracked.

Sean Dawson, head of research at Derive.xyz, a crypto options trading platform, said some correlation remains and that "fears ?around AI exuberance" were also a "big contributor" to Friday's selloff.

A 10% drop in Microsoft stock after it reported a massive AI spend but only a modest revenue beat sent a tremor ?through global markets overnight.

(Reporting by Tom Westbrook and Rae WeeEditing by Shri Navaratnam)

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Lower-quality debt securities generally offer higher yields, but also involve greater risk of default or price changes due to potential changes in the credit quality of the issuer. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

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