Hot topics close

Bitcoin passes $69000 to hit new record price

Bitcoin passes 69000 to hit new record price
More than $7.5bn has flowed into new funds since their approval by US regulators in January

Stay informed with free updates

Simply sign up to the Cryptocurrencies myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your inbox.

Bitcoin traded at $69,200 on Tuesday, marking a new all-time high for the world’s largest cryptocurrency. 

The price has surged since US regulators in January approved a series of spot bitcoin exchange traded funds issued by Wall Street stalwarts including Fidelity and BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager. 

The new wave of capital has resulted in a more than 60 per cent gain for bitcoin since the start of the year and has helped push the flagship crypto token into uncharted territory, passing the previous record it set in November 2021.

More than $7.5bn worth of capital has flowed into the newly approved bitcoin ETFs since their first day of trading on January 11, according to crypto investment group CoinShares.

“The excitement and hype around the ETFs has ended up being far beyond anyone’s expectations,” said Jad Comair, founder of digital asset investor Melanion Capital. Spot bitcoin ETFs give investors the ability to gain direct exposure to the cryptocurrency without the risks associated with largely unregulated crypto exchanges.

Bitcoin’s latest record marks a watershed for the cryptocurrency, which traded as low as $16,000 amid a severe market crisis in 2022 and was frequently dismissed by sceptics as a burst bubble that would not recover following the collapse of high-profile crypto firms including FTX. 

“It’s not just a spectacular jump in price, it’s also a paradigm shift for bitcoin. Today, investors that allocate for bitcoin will be five or 10 times more confident than they would have been just a couple of years ago,” said Comair. 

“We have to ask the question of whether we’re missing something big or not,” said Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet Asset Management. “The environment we’re in now is very different from a couple of years ago when we were clearly in bubble territory.”

The token’s price is also being driven by a fast approaching upgrade to the bitcoin network — referred to as the bitcoin halving — scheduled for next month, which will slow the circulation of available coins. Bitcoin bulls expect that to continue to fuel the cryptocurrency’s upward momentum. 

The run, which has set a dramatic pace even by bitcoin’s standards, has sparked comparisons with 2021, when bitcoin set its previous records following a wave of retail excitement. 

Column chart of Average bitcoin liquidity on centralised exchanges (BTC) showing Bitcoin liquidity on crypto exchanges fails to make up ground despite record price

“The current backdrop looks similar to the exuberant backdrop of 2021 when retail investors were driving both a crypto and equity market rally simultaneously on momentum,” said JPMorgan analyst Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, who cautioned that there was a “high risk of profit-taking” ahead of next month’s bitcoin halving event.

But despite bitcoin’s latest surge, liquidity is yet to return for the crypto industry’s most well known token. According to numbers shared by data provider CCData, liquidity on the top 21 centralised exchanges still lags well behind levels registered this time last year.

Similar news
News Archive
  • London Gatwick Airport
    London Gatwick Airport
    London airport slammed as 'f*****g embarrassment' as several flights delayed
    25 Sep 2023
    1
  • Surgical staple
    Surgical staple
    Three Plaintiffs Sue Medtronic Over Allegedly Faulty Surgical Staplers
    10 Mar 2020
    1
  • Montell Douglas
    Montell Douglas
    Strictly's Montell Douglas shares hospital dash incident that saw her ...
    3 Nov 2024
    2
  • Chester Bennington
    Chester Bennington
    Chester Bennington's widow pays tribute on fourth anniversary of his death
    20 Jul 2021
    6