Bitcoin’s price increased 1.28 percent in the last 24 hours; it hit the lowest at $89,602 in the last 24 hours.
Global crypto leaders to discuss Bitcoin’s future, digital asset regulations, Web 3 architecture, impact of AI on Web3 innovations, and blockchain use cases at Binance Blockchain Week 2025.
Bitcoin’s price increased 4.22 percent in the last 24 hours; it hit the lowest at $89,800 levels.
Bitcoin’s price increased 0.13 percent in the last 24 hours; it hit the lowest at $86,230 and peaked at $88,051 level.
After a massive rally following President Donald Trump’s election, Bitcoin is currently on track for its worst month since 2022
Bitcoin price has moved up 1.05 percent in the last 24 hours.
The value of a Trump-branded memecoin has fallen by about a quarter since August.
Bitcoin crashed more than 36% in over 6 weeks from its all time high of $126,198 (October 6) to fall below the $81,000-mark on November 21.
Bitcoin fell to as low as $80,553 on Friday before regaining some ground over the weekend. It was trading at $86,998 as of 8:00 a.m. in London on Monday, still down 7% year-to-date.
After regaining some ground over the weekend, the original cryptocurrency fell as much as 2.3% to briefly dip below $86,000 on Monday morning, before paring losses
Shares of Trump Media & Technology Group Corp., the parent company of the Truth Social platform, hit a record low on Wednesday. At least part of the decline might be explained by a poorly-timed move into cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin has now shed about a quarter of its value in November, the most for a single month since June 2022
Bitcoin, the world's most valuable cryptocurrency, has fallen 21.2% in November, raising losses over the past three months to 23.2% as chances increase that it will end the year below $90,000.
The next psychological thresholds lie around $85,000 and $80,000, with the 2025 trough of $74,425 — set during April’s tariff related turbulence — in focus
The largest cryptocurrency fell to as low as $88,522 in New York trading, with the latest rout hitting investors big and small
Industry experts aren’t too worried about the 30% crash of Bitcoin from its peak in 2025. Their reason: it is a short-term bull market correction and not a cyclical event.
Once promoted as a high-growth play, an inflation hedge, and a portfolio diversifier, the world’s largest cryptocurrency now faces the prospect of ending the year in the red — without fulfilling any of those roles.
The largest token fell as much as 2.4% on Tuesday, extending its decline from a record of more than $126,000 set in early October.
Bitcoin drops 28% in six weeks as worries over AI stocks spill into digital assets and high-octane bets backfire
The average cost basis across all ETF inflows sits at approximately $89,600, according to Sean Rose at Glassnode — a level Bitcoin breached on Tuesday.
The largest token fell as much as 2.4% during Asia trading hours, extending its decline from a record of more than $126,000 set in early October
The broader market has been reeling since a sharp liquidation wave in early October erased about $19 billion in digital assets.
Wall Street has shown up, exchange-traded funds are bringing crypto into mainstream portfolios and the Trump administration has fully embraced crypto.
After topping $126,000 in October, Bitcoin has fallen sharply, briefly wiping out its 2025 gains before stabilizing on Monday morning in Asia