Bitcoin Is Coming Off a Brutal Week. Here’s What’s Happening Bitcoin is stabilizing slightly today after one of its most punishing weeks in years, but the damage across crypto markets has already been done. The bitcoin price fell below $80,000 over the weekend for the first time since April 2025, briefly plunging to lows near

Crypto industry’s Coinbase, Gemini, and Bullish are getting crushed. Their stocks have dropped as much as 55% over the last three months, while Bitcoin is down a little over 35% since its October peak. There’s no meltdown, no hacks, no lawsuits. Just silence. And that silence is hitting trading platforms the hardest. These exchanges live

Since the recent Bitcoin price crash to $76,000, the broader crypto market has been on high alert, with sentiment shifting to extreme fear levels. A crypto analyst who has shared insights on Bitcoin’s latest market movements predicts more pain for the leading cryptocurrency. He has also warned investors against taking advantage of the decline and

On Aug. 11, 2020, Michael Saylor made history when Strategy (MicroStrategy back then) announced its first Bitcoin purchase of 21,454 $BTC at an average price of $11,653. From that moment on, the corporate treasury game forever changed. But what if you did nothing more than buy one Bitcoin that same day and never touched it

Amid the renewed selling pressure, Bitcoin has now slipped below the realized price of 1-year holders for the first time since September 2023. For context, Bitcoin entered a new bearish phase over the past week after a brief recovery pushed prices above $90,000 on Jan. 28. The rebound failed to hold, and selling pressure quickly

Bitcoin has staged a modest recovery toward the $78,000 level after a sharp sell-off earlier this month. With volatility still elevated and sentiment divided, the key question now is whether Bitcoin can realistically reclaim the $100,000 level before February comes to a close — or if the market needs more time to reset. To answer

Renowned financial market commentator and CNBC host Jim Cramer has once again reacted to crypto market conditions, calling on the Big Bitcoin players in an unusual and curious post. Cramer’s reaction this time barely justifies his stance on Bitcoin, but has seen him show concern as Bitcoin suddenly retested the $77,000 level. Cramer challenges Saylor

Securitize has built a regulation-first tokenization platform that has scaled more than $4 billion in real-world assets. Unlike many tokenization projects focused on equities or experimental assets, research shows that most demand on Securitize comes from low-risk institutional products. US Treasury-backed assets account for about 59% of the tokenized supply on the platform. Private equity

US President Donald Trump has nominated former Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh to lead the US central bank, a move that has sent mixed signals for cryptocurrency markets and US dollar liquidity, according to market analysts. Trump nominated Bitcoin-friendly Warsh on Friday, and he is set to replace Jerome Powell when his term ends in

In this febrile crypto moment, bitcoin’s showing off its classic mix of drama and indecision. A wild ride between $74,532 and $78,610 sets the tone, with volume clocking in at a staggering $86.03 billion—because what’s a day in crypto without a bit of whiplash? The market cap plants its flag at $1.55 trillion, but beneath

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