Bitcoin dips below $79,000
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The main impact of the price decline is slowing Strategy's ability to buy more bitcoin without diluting shareholders, as its stock now trades at a discount to its bitcoin holdings.
Bitcoin (BTC) and other cryptocurrencies has begun sliding and crashing in chunks. By Jan. 30, Bitcoin was trading at $81,847.15. This is a 21% slide in a year. As Bitcoin sentiment continues to decline, analysts are predicting bear market conditions to last longer and with lower price targets.
The strongest bulls take the time to learn the opposite point of view.
This surge in demand for lower-strike puts contrasts with the post-Trump-election pattern of enthusiasm for high-strike calls.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency is down 2% over the past day while gold and silver have dropped 11% and 30%, respectively.
Gold added $1.6 trillion in one day while bitcoin fell to 2026 lows. It's a story about who's buying what – and central banks aren't in bitcoin yet.
Bitcoin, as well as other alternative cryptocurrencies, experienced sharp price declines on Thursday and have yet to bounce back just one day later. Bitcoin fell to the lower $84,00 range yesterday and continued to slip into the early morning hours, hitting as low as $81,600.
Bitcoin trades $43K below power-law fair value in historic deviation. Mathematical analysis projects 105% returns as gap closes by 2027.
Bitcoin fell more than 7% on Saturday.
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The political fundraising group launched by crypto-billionaire brothers Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss raised more than $22 million in the last five months of 2025, but might not get as much bang for its Bitcoin.