Seven major Bitcoin mining pools joined Stratum V2 as miners face rising difficulty, weak hashprice, and tighter profit margins.
CME Group is preparing to launch Bitcoin volatility futures, a product that would give institutional investors a direct way to trade expected price swings in digital assets without taking exposure to the underlying token.
Bitcoin is either at an early-stage bullish recovery, or a late-stage bear market rally- but which one is it?
On-chain metrics show Bitcoin entering a neutral reset phase after aggressive Q1 2026 deleveraging
Strategy will sell BTC only to fund STRC dividends or offset taxes, CEO Phong Le confirms to CNBC.
Avalanche founder Emin Gün Sirer has predicted that Bitcoin, the flagship cryptocurrency, could face a looming crisis.
Seven big Bitcoin mining pools just made a move. They're adopting Stratum V2, and it's kind of a big deal for how mining operations work.
Strategys perpetual preferred stock, STRC, returned to its $100 par value during Fridays trading session, potentially opening the door for the company to raise additional capital for future Bitcoin purchases. The recovery came after 10 trading sessions since the last ex-dividend date, reflecting the stocks usual rebound pattern following dividend-related declines.
Bitcoins recent recovery rally is beginning to lose strength as BTC struggles to break above a critical resistance level near $82,000. After rebounding strongly from March lows, Bitcoin managed to reclaim both the 50-day and 100-day moving averages, signaling renewed short-term bullish momentum.
A third-party data glitch briefly showed Bitcoin at $0.02 on Revolut, causing panic among users.
Bitcoin is seeing an explosive rise in Open Interest, with derivatives activity now surpassing peak session levels recorded during the 2025 all-time high. This explosive growth reflects rising trader participation and increased leverage that is often seen during periods of heightened anticipation for major price moves.
Bitcoin's climb back to $82,000 doesn't mean much. Not yet. A crypto analyst who tracks long-term patterns sees the move as a classic bull trap—one that could drag BTC down to $42,000 before this cycle's pain really ends.