Bitcoin jumps above
$1,000 for first time in three years
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[January 02, 2017]
By Jemima Kelly
LONDON
(Reuters) - Digital currency bitcoin kicked off the new year by jumping
above $1,000 for the first time in three years late on Sunday, having
outperformed all central-bank-issued currencies with a 125 percent climb
in 2016.
Bitcoin - a web-based "cryptocurrency" that has no central authority,
relying instead on thousands of computers across the world that validate
transactions and add new bitcoins to the system - jumped 2.5 percent to
$1,022 on the Europe-based Bitstamp exchange, its highest since December
2013.
Though the digital currency has historically been highly volatile - a
tenfold increase in its value in two months in late 2013 took it to
above $1,100, before a hack on the Tokyo-based Mt. Gox exchange saw it
plunge to under $400 in the following weeks - it has in the past two
years been more stable.
Its biggest daily moves in 2016 were around 10 percent, still very
volatile compared with fiat currencies, but markedly lower than the
trading of 2013, which saw daily price swings of as much as 40 percent.
Bitcoin may have been boosted in the past year by increased demand in
China on the back of a 7 percent annual fall in the value of the yuan in
2016, the Chinese currency's weakest showing in over 20 years. Data
shows most bitcoin trading is done in China.
Bitcoin is used to move money across the globe quickly and anonymously
and does not fall under the purview of any authority, making it
attractive to those wanting to get around capital controls, such as
China's.
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A Bitcoin (virtual currency) paper wallet with QR codes and a coin
are seen in an illustration picture taken at La Maison du Bitcoin in
Paris, France, May 27, 2015. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
It is also may appeal to those worried about a lack of supply of cash,
such as in India, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi removed
high-denomination bank notes from circulation in November.
"The growing war on cash, and capital controls, is making bitcoin look
like a viable, if high risk, alternative," said Paul Gordon, a board
member of the UK Digital Currency Association and co-founder of Quantave,
a firm seeking to make it easier for institutional investors to access
digital currency exchanges.
Though bitcoin is still some way off the all-time high of $1,163 that it
reached on the Bitstamp exchange in late 2013, there are now more
bitcoins in circulation - 12.5 are added to the system every 10 minutes.
Its total worth is at a record-high above $16 billion, putting its value
at around the same as that of an average FTSE 100 company.
(Reporting by Jemima Kelly; Editing by Peter Graff)
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