Should You Buy Dogecoin After Its 31% Dip?

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The cryptocurrency market is on a tear this year. The value of all coins and tokens combined recently hit an all-time high of $3.8 trillion, more than quadrupling from its bear-market low point of $823 billion in 2022.

But those gains have come with significant volatility, especially in the more speculative corners of the crypto space. Meme token Dogecoin (CRYPTO: DOGE), for example, was sitting on an incredible year-to-date return of 414% until last Wednesday, but it has plunged by 31% in the week since.

Dogecoin is heading into 2025 with the wind at its back, thanks to a more favorable regulatory environment and continued support from the world’s richest person, Elon Musk. Therefore, should investors use the recent dip as a buying opportunity?

Image source: Getty Images.

Elon Musk has been a big supporter of Dogecoin since 2021, when he regularly promoted it on social media and even during his appearance on Saturday Night Live (SNL) in May of that year. He even called it his favorite cryptocurrency.

Dogecoin was trading at $0.0046 per token at the beginning of 2021, and within five months, it had soared by 15,769% to a record high of $0.73. Musk’s support was a big contributor to that move, but his SNL appearance happened to mark the peak. Investors realized he didn’t have a concrete plan to back up his vocal support for Dogecoin, so it wound up losing 92% of its value by mid-2022.

After remaining mostly dormant in 2023 and for most of 2024, Trump’s election win on Nov. 5 was the spark Dogecoin needed to stage a recovery. It appears he will be a very pro-crypto president, and he recently nominated pro-crypto businessman Paul Atkins to run the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), pending Senate approval.

That means the crypto industry could face lighter regulation over the next four years, paving the way for new use cases, which might be the key to creating value. However, Dogecoin enthusiasts received another surprise when Trump nominated Musk to head an agency called the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE for short. The acronym is a reference to his favorite cryptocurrency, which sent investors into a frenzy.

Dogecoin soared to a 52-week high of $0.47 earlier this month, and it was charging toward its 2021 record of $0.73. However, it has plummeted 31% since last Wednesday, because the U.S. Federal Reserve issued a new forecast pointing to fewer interest rate cuts next year. Interest rates don’t affect Dogecoin directly, but a higher cost of money tends to weigh on the more speculative areas of the financial markets. It’s easier to profit from borrowed funds when interest rates are low, after all.

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