A financial analyst has warned a $4.1 trillion drop in the global money supply could be about to trigger a bitcoin price crash to
Gold and fiat currencies have dominated national reserves for centuries, but a new era demands innovative solutions.
The dream of a peer-to-peer electronic cash network has been realized… but with centralized stablecoins based on USD, dammit.
Bitcoin has wobbled since breaching the $100,000 milestone earlier this month — but history suggests a new all-time high could be in sight by around mid-January.
Analysts are bullish that demand from spot bitcoin ETFs and the possible adoption of a U.S. bitcoin reserve could help bitcoin to new highs in 2025.
As 2025 approaches, Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) finds itself navigating a shifting macroeconomic landscape, with fading tailwinds raising concerns about sustained momentum, according to a report. What Happened: The Federal Reserve’s hawkish stance,
Russian companies have begun using bitcoin and other digital currencies in international payments following legislative changes that allowed such use in order to counter Western sanctions, Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Wednesday.
The price of bitcoin has tumbled about 12% from a record high reached earlier this week. After topping $108,000 for the first time on Tuesday, the world’s largest cryptocurrency dropped to a price below $93,000 in early trading on Friday. Bitcoin soon recovered some of those losses, settling around $95,000 at 9:30 a.m. ET.
"These types of things never go on forever and often end poorly," Steve Sosnick said of MicroStrategy's leveraged bitcoin bet.
Crypto executives urge better encryption technology as a safeguard against a potential attack powered by quantum computing.
President-elect Donald Trump has expressed interest in building up a stockpile of bitcoin. What would that mean for taxpayers?
Bitcoin's price dipped Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank is not looking to hold the cryptocurrency.