Bitcoin

Bitcoin hits $28k as uncertainty surrounds banks

At the time of writing, the leading cryptocurrency is trading at $28,063, a 2.4% increase in the past 24 hours. The price reached $28,459 at its highest point during the day, before trading at $26,877 during the day’s low.

Overall this week, Bitcoin has gained over 37% against the U.S. dollar. Bitcoin’s market capitalization added $194 billion in 2023, representing a 66% gain year-to-date, outperforming Wall Street banks stocks especially as fears of a global banking crisis are rising.

United States bank valuations have slid amid the ongoing fear surrounding regional banks in the country afte last week’s developments, including the shut down of Silvergate, followed by regulators’ subsequent takeover of Signature Bank and Silicon Valley Bank.

Related: Bitcoin levels to watch as BTC price eyes highest weekly close in 9 months

In Europe, Credit Suisse was acquired by UBS Group for nearly $2 billion earlier in the day as part of emergency plans led by Swiss authorities to preserve the country’s financial stability. The $2 billion deal represents a considerable discount under Credit Suisse’s market value on March 17 of nearly $8 billion, according to data from Companies Market Cap.

An impending global banking crisis could take Bitcoin to $1 million within less than 90 days, claimed on Twitter former Coinbase chief technology officer Balaji Srinivasan. According to Srinivasan’s forecast, a U.S. banking crisis would trigger the American dollar deflation and, thus, to a hyperinflation scenario leading to a $1 million Bitcoin price. Srinivasan is betting $2 million on Twitter on his view for the U.S. economy’s future, as well as potential impacts on Bitcoin’s price.

This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.

Articles You May Like

IMF head says China at ‘fork in the road’ on reforms to boost demand
Moscow seeks to blame Kyiv for Isis concert hall attack
Sketchy Politics: can anything save Sunak?
The weakest links in the global economy are on the mend
Rishi Sunak’s greatest liability is his deluded party