Bitcoin Price Rebounds To $67,000, Remains On Track For Worst Week Since 2022 Amid 'Fear And Fatigue'
Bitcoin (BTC-USD) climbed to nearly $67,000 on Friday after a continued decline overnight sent prices as low as $61,000 following a 13% plunge.
Bitcoin (BTC-USD) climbed to nearly $67,000 on Friday after a continued decline overnight sent prices as low as $61,000 following a 13% plunge.
Bitcoin (BTC-USD) crashed over 13% on Thursday, sinking below $64,000 to touch its lowest levels since October 2024 as a steep sell-off accelerated.
Bitcoin (BTC-USD) crashed over 13% on Thursday, sinking below $64,000 to touch its lowest levels since October 2024 as a steep sell-off accelerated.
Michael Burry warned that Bitcoin’s plunge could deepen into a self-reinforcing “death spiral,” inflicting lasting damage on companies.
Bitcoin and cryptocurrency prices ticked lower Tuesday, after rebounding slightly from their major sell-off over the weekend.
Bitcoin’s price will plunge another 87% and fall to $10,000, warns Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone.
U.S. dollar-backed crypto tokens known as stablecoins could pull around $500 billion in deposits out of U.S. banks by the end of 2028.