Here's How Much These 14 Top Cryptocurrencies Have Fallen From Their Highs

Last year, cryptocurrencies could do no wrong. In fact, you'd have a hard time finding an asset class that had a better single-year performance in all of history relative to digital currencies.

After beginning the year with an aggregate market cap of just $17.7 billion, cryptocurrencies ended 2017 with a combined value of about $613 billion. That's better than a 3,300% increase in value for those of you keeping score at home. For added context, the stock market historically gains 7% per year, inclusive of dividend reinvestment and when adjusted for inflation. It would typically take stocks decades to deliver the gains experienced by cryptocurrency investors over just a 12-month period.

A gold physical bitcoin screaming lower, with a plunging chart in the background.
A gold physical bitcoin screaming lower, with a plunging chart in the background.

Image source: Getty Images.

How the mighty have fallen

However, this year has turned virtual currencies on their heads. Following a continuation of the rally during the first week of January that took the aggregate market cap to as high as $835 billion, digital currencies have since lost more than three-quarters of their value.

It's been a virtual graveyard of sorts for investors, with practically all of the largest and most popular cryptocurrencies sinking from their all-time highs. Here's a snapshot of how the top 14 cryptocurrencies have fared since their peak, according to CoinMarketCap.com.

  • Bitcoin: down 68% since peaking at $20,089

  • Ethereum: down 80% since peaking at $1,432.88

  • Ripple: down 92% since peaking at $3.84

  • Bitcoin cash: down 88% since peaking at $4,355.62

  • EOS: down 79% since peaking at $22.89

  • Stellar: down 77% since peaking at $0.938144

  • Litecoin: down 85% since peaking at $375.29

  • Cardano: down 93% since peaking at $1.33

  • Ethereum Classic: down 69% since peaking at $47.77

  • Monero: down 81% since peaking at $495.84

  • Tron: down 93% since peaking at $0.300363

  • IOTA: down 92% since peaking at $5.69

  • Dash: down 89% since peaking at $1,394.28

  • NEO: down 91% since peaking at $196.85

I've got one word that sums this up, and it's "yuck!"

Excluding Tether, which is a dollar-backed virtual currency that's primarily used as an intermediary on cryptocurrency exchanges, the top-performing cryptocurrency with a current market cap over $1 billion is bitcoin, which has lost "just" 68% of its value since mid-December. Quite a few others, including Ripple, Cardano, NEO, and TRON, and seen more than 90% of their peak valuation disappear.

A stack of fanned hundred dollar bills transforming into the digital blockchain.
A stack of fanned hundred dollar bills transforming into the digital blockchain.

Image source: Getty Images.

Why crypto has fallen out of favor: Let me count the ways

Suffice it to say that virtual currencies are no longer the darlings of investors that they were in 2017, and there are no shortage of reasons for that.