Warsh, Fed and Bitcoin
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The bitcoin price has dropped to 2026 lows of just under $60,000 per bitcoin, plunging by half from its October peak of
23hon MSN
Bitcoin price falls below $65,000: These two major global events are spooking crypto investors
Bitcoin continues to face market pressure due to geopolitical and monetary policy concerns. The US-Iran interim agreement extends the current ceasefire by 60 days, permitting toll-free oil transport through the Strait of Hormuz while addressing unresolved nuclear and economic issues.
Bitcoin fell over 3% to around $107,000 on Thursday as traders continued to react to Powell’s cautious outlook on rate cuts and renewed U.S.–China trade tensions. Bitcoin price continued its slide through much of Thursday, dipping to as low as $106,290 ...
Overview Bitcoin price dropped nearly 3% and now trades near $63,900.Strong resistance remains at $66,800 while support sits near $63,000.Weak institutional dem
Closely watched trader Arthur Hayes has predicted an AI "credit event" is about to crash the market and blow up the bitcoin
The Bitcoin and Ethereum dips have led to more significant movement on Myriad’s “Pump or Dump” markets, which ask prediction market users to determine whether an asset’s next stop is to a higher or lower benchmark. (Disclaimer: Myriad is a product of Decrypt’s parent company, Dastan).
Ripple (CRYPTO:XRP) is down 6% over the past 24 hours, sliding to roughly $1.14 by Thursday afternoon. The drop marks a sharp risk-off turn for the token even as U.S. equity benchmarks push higher on the session.
It doesn't seem like bitcoin is getting out of its slump anytime soon: The price of the world's largest crypto fell to $62,300 Thursday afternoon. This additional decline comes after bitcoin sold off in reaction to the Federal Open Market Committee meeting yesterday,
Both ETFs launched in 2024 and offer regulated access to major cryptocurrencies for investors seeking exposure without using crypto exchanges.
Bitcoin is rallying towards $70,000, driven by optimism surrounding a potential Iran peace deal and falling oil prices. BlackRock's Rick Rieder predicts an "explosive rally" as up to $9 trillion in sidelined capital is poised for redeployment,
