Bitcoin, USDC stablecoin rally after U.S. intervenes on SVB

Reuters

Published Mar 12, 2023 20:55

Updated Mar 13, 2023 05:37

SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies rallied on Monday after U.S. authorities announced plans to limit the fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and as cryptocurrency firm Circle assured investors its peg was secure.

The U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve announced a range of measures to stabilize the banking system and said depositors at SVB would have access to their deposits on Monday.

The moves came as authorities took possession of New York-based Signature Bank, the second bank failure in a matter of days.

Stablecoin USD Coin (USDC) recovered to $0.9917, closer to its par and up from last week's lows around $0.88.

Over the weekend, USDC had lost its 1:1 dollar peg and hit a record low on Saturday on concerns over the exposure of Circle — the firm behind USDC — to Silicon Valley Bank.

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire said in a tweet its $3.3 billion USDC reserve deposit held at the collapsed Silicon Valley Bank will be fully available when U.S. banks open Monday.

"Circle's USDC operations will open for business, including with new automated settlement via our new partnership with Cross River Bank," Allaire said.

Bitcoin was up about 8% from Sunday's lows, trading at $22,568.

In U.S. premarket trading, cryptocurrency miners Riot Blockchain and Marathon Digital, crypto exchange Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) Global and software developer MicroStrategy Inc also rebounded from last week's lows to gain between 6.5% and 10%.

Shares of Signature Bank were halted for trading.

U.S. officials said depositors of New York's Signature Bank, which was closed on Sunday by the New York state financial regulator, would also be made whole at no loss to the taxpayer.

Signature, like SVB, had a clientele concentrated in the tech sector, and the securities on its balance sheet had eroded as interest rates rose. As of September, almost a quarter of Signature's deposits came from the cryptocurrency sector, but the bank announced in December that it would shrink its crypto-related deposits by $8 billion.

Most analysts, however, cautioned against assuming all is well with market sentiment after these measures.

"Markets remain unsettled from the SVB failure," said Alvin Tan, head of FX strategy at RBC (TSX:RY) Capital Markets in Singapore.

"The market turbulence sparked by SVB has upended rising market expectations on the Fed rate path. The situation is evolving, but volatility looks set to remain elevated in coming days."

Crypto exchange Bitstamp, meanwhile, said it would continue to operate normally, despite Signature Bank's failure.