Institutions are buying more bitcoin per month than what's being mined, and there just isn't enough for everyone.
With the highly anticipated bitcoin halving reducing new mining supply, what are crypto traders thinking about upcoming market behavior?
Casual investors are hearing about bitcoin more often while professionals are taking advantage of a growing derivatives market.
Nearly 85% — or 25.79 million — of addresses holding bitcoin are now “in-the-money.”
Bitcoin’s price keeps gaining as people increasingly talk about the halving - but the event’s potential after-effects may be considered an afterthought for many investors.
Bitcoin mining difficulty increased to 16.10 trillion (T) on Tuesday, close to the network’s all-time high of 16.55T recorded in March.
Bitcoin’s third halving is less than two weeks away. Some traders are less than bullish ahead of the event.
There’s a “general expectation for a pick up in volatility” around CME expiry.
With bitcoin’s price drop and imminent halving, mining farms in China are struggling to fill slots despite the coming rainy season, when power is cheap.
MicroBT is rolling out three top-of-the-line bitcoin miners hoping to eat further into Bitmain's market dominance at a key time for the industry.
To the moon or to the cellar? Options traders are buying bitcoin puts, or bearish bets on the cryptocurrency, heading into next month's halving.
As central banks around the world inject trillions into the global economy, investors are looking at bitcoin and its "halving" as a hedge against inflation.