The cryptocurrency rose 1% before paring some of the gains to trade at $68,252 as of 8:32 a.m. in New York. Smaller tokens such as second-ranked Ether and top-10 coin Solana oscillated in narrow ranges.
US spot-Bitcoin ETFs lured almost $2.4 billion of net inflows in the six days through Oct. 18, data compiled by Bloomberg show, partly on bets that US crypto rules will become friendlier after the Nov. 5 presidential election.
Republican candidate Donald Trump is avowedly pro-crypto, so much so that Bitcoin is viewed as a so-called Trump trade. Democratic rival Vice President Kamala Harris has vowed to support a regulatory framework for the industry. That contrasts with a crackdown on the sector under the Biden administration.
The two key market trends are the elections and the global macroeconomic environment, according to David Lawant, head of research at crypto prime broker FalconX. The Bitcoin options market indicates that “forward implied volatility is heavily clustered around the election day and somewhat subdued leading to it and some time after it,” he wrote in a note.
Bitcoin climbed nearly 10% in the seven days through Sunday, the original cryptocurrency’s best weekly performance in more than a month. ETF demand helped the token reach a record high of $73,798 in March. The rally cooled and Bitcoin last traded above $70,000 back in June.