The
largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange's listing on the Nasdaq on
Wednesday is considered a landmark victory for cryptocurrency
advocates.
Bitcoin is the world's biggest cryptocurrency, with growing
mainstream acceptance as an investment and a means of payment.
It rose as much as 5% on Tuesday. Smaller rival Ethereum also
reached a record high of $2,205.
The overall cryptocurrency market capitalization hit an all-time
peak of $2 trillion earlier this month, according to data and
market trackers CoinGecko and Blockfolio.
Major firms including BNY Mellon, Mastercard Inc and Tesla Inc
are among those to have embraced or invested in cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin topped $60,000 early last month, fuelled by Tesla's move
to buy $1.5 billion of the digital currency for its balance
sheet. For the past two weeks, it had traded in a tight range.
"When bitcoin markets create new highs, the price often
range-trades and we witness a round of profit-taking," said
James Butterfill of digital asset manager CoinShares.
"During this most recent period, have witnessed a similar
profit-taking round, which now looks to have run its course."
Simon Peters, analyst at multi-asset investment platform eToro
said "demand is flooding the market from institutions just as
large amounts of bitcoin and ethereum are increasingly being
taken offline and holders are transferring them to their own
wallets."
"There is only one outcome from that, and investors should
expect higher highs and higher lows throughout the year," he
added.
The multifold rise in cryptocurrencies is also driven by
investors seeking high-yielding assets amid low interest rates.
However, the meteoric rise of bitcoin, which traded at a few
hundred dollars only five years earlier, has led major
investment banks to warn of a speculative bubble.
Several fund managers surveyed by BofA and Deutsche Bank have
said Bitcoin was in "bubble" territory and expect it to pull
back sharply.
At 1044 GMT on Tuesday, bitcoin was at $62,505.27, up around
4.5% on the day.
(Reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan and Tom Wilson; editing by
Larry King and Bernadette Baum)
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