Bitcoin treads water, struggles for fresh catalyst

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Most digital currency prices traded near break-even levels reached after the Securities and Exchange declared that bitcoin and Ether don’t warrant the type of regulatory scrutiny that traditional securities are subject.

A single bitcoin  last changed hands at $6,723.53, unchanged since Monday 5 p.m. Eastern Time on the Kraken crypto exchange.

The total value of all cryptocurrencies remains below $300 billion, last valued at $292 billion, slightly above last Thursday’s $290 billion peak, according to data from Coinmarketcap.com.

Last week, the SEC said bitcoin and Ether shouldn’t be labeled as securities, marking a victory for digital-currency enthusiasts who said that conventional securities laws shouldn’t apply to those assets that operate on the decentralized ledger, the technological backbone that underpins cryptocurrencies like bitcoin or Ether, among others.

However, the enthusiasm around that win hasn’t immediately catalyzed into a more substantial price swing for bitcoin or the broader virtual-asset complex, market participants said.

Altcoins showing life

Coins alternative to bitcoin, known as altcoins, are outperforming bitcoin in early Tuesday trading.

Ether has risen 3% to $534.32, Bitcoin Cash is up 1.2% at $898.00, Litecoin has gained 0.7% to $100.14 and XRP the coin that runs on the Ripple protocol is trading at 55 cents, up 0.8%.

Futures are showing small gains to start Tuesday. The Cboe July futures contract  is up 0.7% at $6,750, while the CME June contract is 0.4% higher at $6,720.

Aaron Hankin is a MarketWatch reporter in New York who covers cryptocurrency and financial markets.

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