Bitcoin price fell on Sunday morning as investors avoided risky assets amid nervous global markets.


According to Arab Net, it reached $ 18,468 at 4:30 am GMT, a decrease of 9.9% from its value on Saturday, near its lowest level since December 13, 2020.


Since hitting its highest level on November 10, 2021 ($68,991), Bitcoin has lost more than 72% of its value.


All major cryptocurrencies fell sharply on Sunday morning. Ether, the second most used cryptocurrency, has lost about 11% of its value.


Stocks fell this week, due to the fear that the central banks, led by the US Federal Reserve, will not seem tough in the will to curb inflation, which threatens to weaken the global economy.


While the cryptocurrency market was worth more than $3 trillion at its peak seven months ago, it fell below $1 trillion on Monday, after hitting $3,000 billion in November.


In addition, Bitcoin's decline accelerated after Celsius and Babel Finance suspended withdrawals.


The first company, valued at $12 billion, suggested its users to use their historical cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ether to invest in new cryptocurrencies.


As for the second, it said to its clients on Friday that it will suspend all withdrawals due to unusual pressures on liquidity.


A brief freeze on Bitcoin withdrawals from the world's largest platform, Binance, a few days ago, contributed to a decline in investment in cryptocurrencies.


Coinbase, for its part, announced on Tuesday that it would cut 18% of its jobs, or about 1,100 positions.


Co-founder and Managing Director of Coinbase Brian Armstrong justified the large-scale expulsions as apparently related to the recession we are entering after an economic boom that lasted more than a decade.


In 2021, this still nascent sector has attracted a growing number of traditional financial investors whose appetite for risk has been opened up by the ultra-loose policies of central banks around the world.