Bitcoin climbed suddenly on Tuesday to the highest level since November, leading a surge in virtual currencies and ending three months of calm in the US$160 billion market.
Bitcoin climbed suddenly on Tuesday to the highest level since November, leading a surge in virtual currencies and ending three months of calm in the US$160 billion market.
The jury may still be out on cryptocurrencies but demand for blockchain is strong, with blockchain developers making more money than they did six months ago.
Transparency and the rise of stringent regulations for safeguarding consumer data are advancing the adoption of blockchain technology in the healthcare sector, which is anticipated to reach a market value of US$890.5 million by 2023.
Michael Novogratz, Galaxy Digital founder and chief executive officer, talks about where he sees Bitcoin heading and the Fed’s interest rate hike path. He speaks to Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker on “Bloomberg Markets.”
From concerns over data privacy to lack of transparency surrounding paid content, Facebook has come under fire globally regarding a number of accusations.
But could blockchain restore trust and accountability in the social media giant?
Prominent blockchain developer Sunny King certainly thinks so.
Australia is punching above its weight when it comes to blockchain innovation, ranking sixth globally in blockchain patent applications, ahead of Canada and India.
Mike Kayamori, chief executive officer at Quoine, discusses the fall in cryptocurrencies in November, where he sees prices heading in 2019, regulation in the industry, consolidation, security token offerings, trends he’s seeing and the possibility of getting prices back to the record levels.
Sonny Singh, Bitpay Inc.’s chief commercial officer, discusses the selloff in crypto assets with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang on “Bloomberg Technology.
Turmoil engulfed cryptocurrency markets again on Tuesday, with every major coin extending a rout that’s rocked confidence in the nascent asset class just as US regulators try to close in on alleged fraud.
Bitcoin’s no longer boring.
After months of tranquility that became the envy of equity investors, The biggest cryptocurrency roared back into the public consciousness this week with the biggest sell-off since August, another fork and a cameo in a major semiconductor earnings report. Some digital asset industry pundits have already begun referring to it as the crypto winter.