Bitcoin prices climbed to an all-new high during the week through Friday, December 20, as multiple developments, including some notable government announcements,
When you hear "volatility," you might equate it with danger. But smart investors know that price movements are fundamentally different from risk. Here's why.
The price of bitcoin has soared above $100,000 but some Wall Street experts believe now is the best time to buy. Here's how to invest.
Bitcoin dipped below the $93,000 mark earlier in the day before trading above that price in volatile trade. The digital asset was last trading at $96,597.36, according to Coin Met
President-elect Donald Trump has expressed interest in building up a stockpile of bitcoin. What would that mean for taxpayers?
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Asset managers hoping to seize on the momentum of bitcoin funds are jockeying to put smaller tokens into exchange-traded funds.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday the U.S. central bank has no desire to be involved in any government effort to stockpile large amounts of bitcoin.
Bitcoin prices have more than doubled this year, fueled by the launch of the first U.S. cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds, plus Donald Trump's election. Asset managers hope to seize on the momentum by putting smaller and riskier tokens into ETFs—but some investors are skeptical.
Some may have seen Powell's comments as handing the market a lump of coal for Christmas. But the Fed's new projections should not have been surprising.
Spot bitcoin ETFs saw $680 million in outflows on Thursday, the largest volume recorded in a single-day, according to Bloomberg data.