Cryptocurrencies continued their epic slide with a fresh bout of losses Friday after the SEC dashed hopes that a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund would appear before the end of this year.
Bitcoin, the largest digital token, slumped as much as 10 per cent, taking it down past US$3,250 ($4735) to the lowest level since September 2017, according to consolidated pricing compiled by Bloomberg. Smaller rivals including Ether, Litecoin and XRP were hit even harder. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index sank as much as 12 per cent.
"As we head toward the end of the year it feels as though the sell-off is still to be concluded," said David Thomas, director and co-founder at GlobalBlock. "There is further scope for more downward pressure."
The Securities and Exchange Commission plans to decide by February 27 whether to approve a proposed ETF from financial-technology company SolidX Partners Inc. and asset manager Van Eck Associates Corp., the agency said December 6.
The proposal was set to get a decision from the SEC in December after previous delays and the new timeline is a fresh blow to an industry that's seen prices fall throughout 2018. A key impediment has been a lack of mainstream institutional adoption, alongside continuing security and regulatory concerns.