Bitcoin’s death cross confirmation may mean BTC is officially in a bear market
A rare death cross has been confirmed on Bitcoin’s price chart, suggesting that the bear market has just started.
A rare death cross has been confirmed on Bitcoin’s price chart, suggesting that the bear market has just started.
The outflows reflect short-term price movements, not lower institutional demand or structural issues in the Bitcoin market, analysts said.
US authorities are investigating Chinese Bitcoin mining hardware giant Bitmain over potential national security risks tied to alleged remote capabilities, according to Bloomberg.
Chicago-based Crypto Dispensers says it’s considering a $100 million sale, just days after the firm and its founder were hit with money laundering charges.
With short-term holders driving Bitcoin’s sell-off, realized losses are hitting historic levels, leaving investors to wonder where the bottom might be.
Bitcoin's price dips below $90,000, yet Republic and Kraken ink nine-figure deals. If this is a bear market, someone forgot to tell big money.
Japan’s stimulus package has shaken global markets, including Bitcoin, while the UK cracks down on Russian money laundering and sanctions evasion with crypto.
As pension funds evaluate Bitcoin’s scarcity, resilience and inflation behavior, a core question emerges: Can BTC become a true institutional store of value?...
Analysts warn structural support is weakening as ETF outflows accelerate, pushing bitcoin to $82,000 and the total crypto market cap below $2.9 trillion.
The Department of Homeland Security-led "Operation Red Sunset" examined whether Bitmain's machines could enable espionage or grid sabotage.
The launch lands amid steep drawdowns in bitcoin and ether, adding risk around timing for highly leveraged ETPs.
Spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds in the U.S. posted their second-largest daily outflow since their inception.