The March 12 crash is still fresh in crypto traders’ and fund managers’ minds, leaving some to think no trading decisions are the best decisions for now.
Gold is up Monday and so are most cryptocurrencies, seemingly buoyed by the U.S. Federal Reserve's drastic action to thwart the coronavirus’ effects on markets and the economy.
Traditional markets continue to struggle during the coronavirus crisis while cryptocurrencies are seeing an upswing.
Prices in the crypto market are seeing such a steep upward trend that arbitrage traders are able to trade between exchanges to easily capture profit.
Cryptocurrency markets stabilized somewhat as traditional financial markets found some footing Tuesday.
Bitcoin’s return above the $9,000 mark may have been driven by some of the same forces causing a rally in bonds – a desire for respite from a coronavirus-plagued markets.
The price of bitcoin broke above $9,000 on a bullish run at 9:00 UTC (4:00 a.m. EST).
Bitcoin remains steady, with its 24-hour price in the $8,600-$8,800 range.
Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales said Friday he has not seen a crypto use case convincing enough to integrate one into the platform.
For the first time in three months, bitcoin’s price is being quoted in five digits to the left of the decimal.
The upgrade saw an "inadvertent" split as an unknown entity mined a block on the old chain, the BSV team says.
Volatility in bitcoin SV (BSV) is raising concerns about the resilience and stability of the world’s fifth-largest cryptocurrency.
A major code update for the cryptocurrency bitcoin SV will render some features of BitGo's wallets useless, the crypto custodian says.
The latest brouhaha says a lot about the propensity for drama in the ecosystem, Michael J. Casey writes.
After a recent network upgrade, nodes separated from the bitcoin SV blockchain, highlighting why hard forks prompt much infighting among devs.