Bitcoin hovered around $9,600 in volatile trade on
Friday, after tumbling about 15 percent from an all-time high hit this
week as some investors warned ominously of a bubble and further falls in
the stratospheric cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin was down 2.8 percent at $9,612 in early Asian trading on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange, from a record peak of $11,395 set on Wednesday. On Thursday, it went as low as $9,000.
The latest slide has tempered an astronomical rise in recent months: Bitcoin was up almost 1,100
percent year-to-date on Wednesday. As of 0200 GMT, it was still up around more than 900 percent.
Bitcoin’s rise has been fuelled by signs that the digital currency is slowly gaining traction in the mainstream investment world, as well as by increasing public awareness.
Bitcoin was down 2.8 percent at $9,612 in early Asian trading on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange, from a record peak of $11,395 set on Wednesday. On Thursday, it went as low as $9,000.
The latest slide has tempered an astronomical rise in recent months: Bitcoin was up almost 1,100
percent year-to-date on Wednesday. As of 0200 GMT, it was still up around more than 900 percent.
Bitcoin’s rise has been fuelled by signs that the digital currency is slowly gaining traction in the mainstream investment world, as well as by increasing public awareness.
In the past week, Google searches for “bitcoin”
exceeded searches for “Trump” for the first time, data from Google
showed, even though U.S. President Donald Trump has been prominently in
the news this week.
Several large market
exchanges including Nasdaq, CBOE Holdings and CME Group -- the world’s
largest derivatives exchange -- have said they are planning to provide
futures contracts based on bitcoin.
Bitcoin’s rapid ascent has prompted warnings from a stream of prominent investors that it had reached bubble territory.
The
deputy governor of the Bank of England on Wednesday said investors
should “do their homework” before investing in the digital currency.
Despite
its massive fall this week, bitcoin still ended November 54.6 percent
higher, its best monthly performance since a near 66 percent gain in
August.
The cryptocurrency has
posted monthly losses only three times in 2017. One industry watcher
predicted further rises were in the offing as demand for bitcoin is set
to outpace supply.

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