Bitcoin and crypto traders are braced for the Federal Reserve's latest interest rate decision after U.S. president Donald Trump called for rates to come down
Bitcoin could top fresh records in the coming days, with prices soaring to as high $130,000 in the coming months, Standard Chartered wrote.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday approved part of an application for a novel exchange-traded fund that would track the two largest cryptocurrencies.
Standard Chartered placed its forecast for Bitcoin at $200,000 for the end of 2025, while global investment manager VanEck believes the first quarter of the year might see Bitcoin reaching a high of $180,000. Others like Bernstein estimate that the world’s largest cryptocurrency will scale $200,000 later this year.
A low-cost solo mining rig was used to mine a Bitcoin block on Wednesday, though they secured the $330K prize with a little help.
Bitcoin price soared back toward range highs after this week’s FOMC meeting, but data show retail investors largely absent from the current bull market.
Ever since President Trump promised to create a "Strategic National Bitcoin Stockpile," the usual chorus of Bitcoin skeptics have doubted that it will ever happen.
Trump’s recent executive order may signal the end of Bitcoin’s historically rigid four-year market cycle. With regulatory clarity, institutional adoption, and government-backed initiatives, could this policy shift usher in a new era of sustained growth—eliminating the dreaded crypto winter?
The Czech National Bank will consider holding billions of dollars worth of bitcoin in its reserves, Governor Ales Michl said on Wednesday, potentially the first shift into the cryptocurrency by a western central bank if it went ahead.
Price outlookOur analysis for 2025 forecasts bitcoin reaching a target of $150,000 in the first half of the year. However, an initial pullback
Bitcoin billionaire' Kevin Segal faces charges in a $212K Wyoming scam involving luxury hotels. He's asked for lower bail, but persecutors cite his $2B claim.