Bitcoin Briefly Climbs Back Above $50K for First Time in Six Days
The largest cryptocurrency continues to claw back ground after last week suffering its biggest loss since March 2020.

Bitcoin pushed above $50,000 early Tuesday for the first time in six days, as the largest cryptocurrency continued to recover from last week's 21% sell-off.
- Bitcoin (BTC) is trading around $49,444 as of 12:37 UTC (7:37 p.m. ET) and cooling slightly, having risen to a 24 hour high above $50,200.
- The price has gained 6.8% over the previous 24 hours. Bitcoin’s 24-hour range: $45,741.74-$50,213.03 (CoinDesk 20).
- BTC is trading above its 100-hour and 200-hour averages on the hourly chart, a bullish signal for market technicians.

The push past $50,000 came as the Chicago Board Options Exchange's announced an official filing to list shares of VanEck’s BTC exchange-traded fund.
Trading volume was strong on Monday as bitcoin's price rose 9.7%, the most in three weeks, according to data from the Bitstamp exchange.
"We have seen an increase in cryptocurrency offerings from the largest investment banks including bitcoin research, custody, trading, and prime brokerage," said Kyle Davies, co-founder of Three Arrows Capital. "I expect these offerings to grow as global investment banks embrace cryptocurrencies."
Cryptocurrencies were up across the board alongside bitcoin, with stellar, XRP and ether also gaining.
The mood was mixed, with some traders expressing caution:
"We've seen lots of signs of cooling off in BTC – price decreasing, lower premiums, less volatility," Sam Bankman-Fried told CoinDesk via Telegram on Monday. "That obviously doesn't say for sure what will happen in the future though."
In Asia markets, the ASX All Ordinaries Index is up 0.57%, the Nikkei 225 Index is up 0.61% and the Hang Seng Index is also in the green, up 1.63% on the day.
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Bitcoin Jumps to $99K as Spiking Coinbase Premium Points to Strong U.S. Buying

Spot BTC prices were at times $300 pricier on Coinbase relative to Binance, suggesting the rally may be driven by heavy demand from American investors.
What to know:
- Bitcoin surged towards $100,000 on Wednesday's U.S. trading session, gaining 3.2% in the past 24 hours.
- The rally coincided with significant spot BTC price premium on Coinbase.
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell called bitcoin a competitor to gold during a panel discussion.











