Downward bitcoin prices could impact stakeholders more than ever before, including derivatives traders and miners.
Ether is outperforming bitcoin in 2020 but has lower liquidity and different technical dynamics than the world’s largest cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin attempted to recover from a price dip on Friday as global stock indexes end the week lower.
Bitcoin has seen double-digit gains in price since the halving. Institutional investors doing more trading in crypto options on CME is a sign of continued interest.
A slowly rising bitcoin price might not help some miners run profitable operations now that the halving is in the past.
Based on the rise of daily active bitcoin addresses, the highest number since 2018, interest could continue now that the halving is complete.
The crypto derivatives market is helping to hedge the uncertainty on which way the bitcoin market will go when miners have less revenue post-halving.
Bitcoin volatility has risen a bit, higher than the S&P 500 ahead of its expected halving next week - but it’s nowhere close to the rocky ride oil has been on.
After a flurry of trading late last week, bitcoin dipped on lower volume.
Bitcoin cooled off after jumping to its highest levels in nearly two months, when it was up as much as $9,478. Yet, stakeholders say crypto interest remains strong.
Year to date, the native token of the Ethereum network’s 50 percent rally trounced bitcoin’s 7 percent gains.
The surge in volatility for oil goes back a lot further than Monday's crash, CryptoCompare data indicates.
Oil’s bounceback performance seems to be taking the driver’s seat in market activity. Bitcoin is also up, and ether’s price performance is even better.
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While oil futures continue to collapse, bitcoin holds steady, even making gains as the U.S. market closes lower.