Bitcoin, crypto
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Bitcoin’s failure to rally along with gold since its October flash crash has dented bitcoin’s reputation as an emerging safe haven, with traders all but giving up on bitcoin and crypto more broadly until U.S. president Donald Trump’s new pick for Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh gets his feet under the desk.
Arca's CIO, Jeff Dorman, argues that Bitcoin’s weakness reflects a deeper problem with how investors define its value.
Cryptocurrency markets fell as global equities and precious metals sold off, while bitcoin liquidations exacerbated downside moves.
Bitcoin is a notoriously volatile investment. Looking back at the past five years, we've already seen it sink from $68,000 in November 2021 to a multi-year low of around $16,000 in November 2022, then rally to a record high of more than $126,000 in October 2025.
U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent has warned he wouldn’t be surprised if China is building a U.S. dollar and bitcoin challenger based on
The numbers weren't pretty, but the fourth-quarter loss does not signal a cash crunch or the necessity of bitcoin sales, say analysts.
After briefly holding above psychologically important levels, bitcoin slipped sharply, catching many investors off guard and triggering widespread
MicroStrategy reveals its extreme Bitcoin downside scenario, outlining when debt pressure, restructuring, or dilution risks emerge.
As Bitcoin's price wipes gains seen since President Trump's election in 2024, here's a guide to some of the crypto market's trickiest terms.
In an exclusive Cointelegraph interview, Bitcoin OG Samson Mow shares his perspective on Bitcoin’s latest massive crash, what’s driving the sell-offs and why a rebound could be closer than most expect.