Bitcoin seems to stabilize
Digest more
The nomination of Kevin Warsh as Fed chair was the latest in a long line of hits absorbed by bitcoin in recent months.
Does the IMF ban Bitcoin reserves? No, but they strongly discourage it. Learn about the IMF's warnings on volatility, financial stability, and the El Salvador case study.
Having called the bitcoin top in 2024 and seen the boom/bubble play out, I’ve been predicting the subsequent crash for a very long time. And voila, here we are.
In the worst case scenario, crypto miners could go bankrupt and the metals market could plummet if bitcoin keeps falling, Michael Burry said.
Michael Burry warns Bitcoin breakdown could trigger cascading market risks.
Are governments buying Bitcoin? Explore the concept of "State Bitcoin Reserves," sovereign custody, and the strategic debates shaping the March 2026 treasury landscape.
'This is absolutely INSANE': Bitcoin’s weekend crash exposes the cracks beneath crypto’s latest boom
While no one has fond memories of the 2022 crypto winter — with the price of bitcoin falling 80% — the timeline was relatively brief, roughly one year from the blowoff top to the bottom. From there, bitcoin quickly doubled in price, rose through 2023, and ultimately hit a new record in early 2024.
Bitcoin, as well as other alternative cryptocurrencies, experienced sharp price declines on Thursday and have yet to bounce back just one day later. Bitcoin fell to the lower $84,00 range yesterday and continued to slip into the early morning hours, hitting as low as $81,600.
Newspoint on MSN
Bitcoin down 11% in a week: What is going on?
Bitcoin's (CRYPTO:BTC) slide below $80,000 has raised fears of a deeper collapse, but market structure suggests the next leg down may be more compressed than in past cycles. Why Bitcoin's Market Structure Is Turning Bearish Bitcoin has fallen roughly 11% over the past week,