Bitcoin plunged to $86,000 as extreme fear swept markets, sparking heavy selling and erasing billions. Traders blamed regulatory uncertainty, forced liquidations and spiking volatility.
Bitcoin and Ethereum hit the brakes Friday as trading thinned ahead of holiday markets, with investors growing cautious amid subdued volume and simmering geopolitical tensions that could trigger sharp, short-term volatility
Bitcoin surged to $111,000 after softer CPI data raised expectations of Fed rate cuts, sparking renewed investor demand and a broad crypto market rally amid reduced inflation concerns.
Arthur Hayes warned most Layer-1 blockchains outside Ethereum and Solana are ‘headed to zero,’ predicting market consolidation to favor a few resilient networks and wipe out weaker projects.
Arthur Hayes says Bitcoin could hold $80,000 as Fed policy shifts erode the dollar, with rising macro liquidity and investor rotation into crypto seen as a hedge against tightening risks.
Fluttering in the realms of financial freedom, Bitcoin, with its decentralized ledger and resilient network, challenges censorship, reshapes cross-border payments and reframes debates on money and free speech.
Hyperliquid whale’s unrealized gains plunge from $100M to $38.4M as concentrated ETH and XRP long positions unwind, triggering heavy selling and market contraction across major crypto pairs.
Bitcoin. Rising like unpredictable exhilaration, it shatters resistance levels and investor expectations, sending markets into a frenzy as analysts weigh catalysts and risks amid renewed institutional interest.
Cathie Wood lowers her 2030 Bitcoin target to $1.2 million, revising long-term expectations as evolving market dynamics and adoption trends prompt a reassessment of crypto’s growth outlook.
Bitcoin slumped to $102,000 after fresh Fed signals of prolonged tightening and mounting investor caution sparked sell-offs, denting optimism for a sustained rebound in the largest cryptocurrency.