Markets still remain bullish; retail traders take to derivatives.
Bitcoin reached a new all-time high of $50,001.35 Tuesday morning, just days after breaking above $48,000.
It's the year of the ox, and many traders and investors are holding their bitcoin in anticipation of a bullish market trend.
The price jump coinciding with Elon Musk's Twitter attention retraced over the weekend.
Bitcoin gains in 2021 dropped below 1% as strong selling continues.
Bitcoin has rallied nearly 15% in the past 24 hours. Ether hits $1,200.
Bitcoin’s price continues to climb, BTC is leaving exchanges, and bitcoin "whale" sightings are becoming more frequent. But the question remains, why?
In a fragmented global market, price quotes are all over the place. That's why CoinDesk created the Bitcoin Price Index (BPI) and is standing by it.
Fifty-four percent of bitcoin addresses are making money on their investments despite the cryptocurrency's drop to six-month lows, according to data from IntoTheBlock.
Support at $7,900 lasted about one-half-hour before the price went southward once more, sitting at $7,800 as of writing.
Beginning at 17:50 UTC and lasting until 18:20 UTC, BTC witnessed a large pullback from $10,200 to $9,600.
The price of bitcoin has fallen below $4,000 for the first time since September 26, 2017 and is now down 30 percent in the last 7 days alone.
MV Index Solutions, a subsidiary of investment management firm VanEck, has launched a new index tracking the OTC performance of bitcoin.
Bitcoin has dropped below $7,000, reaching a month-low since Feb. 7 while the cryptocurrency market is seeing a major sell-off.
Each of the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization hit an all-time price high in the past four days, according to market data.