Momentum for Bitcoin is beginning to cool following a white-hot week for the asset, beginning October 28, where it traded $175 shy of its all-time high.
Bitcoin dipped as low as $67,569 on Sunday, its lowest point in a week, data from CoinGecko shows.
Its latest slip comes as self-proclaimed crypto candidate, former President Donald Trump, faces fresh warning signs ahead of Election Day on November 5.
Bitcoin is down by nearly 2% on the day but remains up by about 1% over the past seven days to $68,040.
Last Tuesday, Bitcoin spiked above $73,000 for the first time in months, bolstered by a strong performance in Bitcoin ETFs, with billions of dollars rushing into the American funds—most of it going to BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT).
Bitcoin began cooling off on Thursday and continued into the weekend, slipping below the $68,000 mark amid new doubts around the prospect of crypto advocate Donald Trump claiming a second term as president.
A new poll released Saturday by veteran pollster Ann Selzer suggests that the Republican candidate could lose Iowa to Vice President Kamala Harris, with the Democrat up 47% to 44%.
Trump has carried the state in the last two elections, and while the poll is an outlier compared to others, Selzer is considered uncannily accurate and is one of the best-rated pollsters by FiveThirtyEight.
News of the poll sent ripples across the political world Saturday amid questions over whether the poll pointed to other potential surprise results ahead in swing states. Amid the speculation, Trump's dominant lead on prediction market platforms started to collapse.
Trump held a commanding 67% chance of winning the election as of last Wednesday on the leading blockchain betting platform Polymarket, compared to 33% for Harris at the time.
By Sunday early afternoon, the odds of a Trump win sat at 60% compared to 40% for Harris.
Now, the site shows a 54% chance for Trump and 46% for Harris. Polymarket has now handled over $3 billion worth of trading volume solely on the market for the outcome of the U.S. presidential election.
Over at Kalshi, a CFTC-regulated prediction market platform that just added crypto support via USDC, Harris has held the lead on multiple occasions since Sunday night, and the candidates remain close as of this writing, with Trump at 51% and Harris at 49%.
Last week, they were nearly as far apart on Kalshi as they were on Polymarket at the peak.
BREAKING: After being down nearly 30% just 5 days ago, Kamala Harris is now up 6% on Kalshi
🔵Harris: 53%
🔴Trump: 47% pic.twitter.com/btpBH38B6u— Kalshi (@Kalshi) November 3, 2024
These prediction market results have typically shown a very different spread than traditional national polls, however, with Harris leading 51% to 47% in the latest ABC News/Ipsos poll from October 22.
As bettors recalibrate their predictions going into Tuesday, the growing doubts around Trump—who many analysts have said will be better for the future of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency in America—may have played a role in Bitcoin's recent slide.
As Bitcoin goes, so does most of the crypto market.
Given last week's hot streak, the resulting dip has rocked many traders who were betting on the price of BTC going up.
Total crypto market liquidations exceed $315 million over the past 24 hours, per data from CoinGlass, with long positions making up $250 million of that sum. Bitcoin positions made up over $76 million of the total.
Edited by Sebastian Sinclair