Bitcoin, the world’s most popular cryptocurrency, has soared in value during the last 24 hours. In a period of extreme volatility, the rally was a powerful one.
Bitcoin’s current price is $51,462.87, and its dominance is 41.63 percent, up 2.51% percent for the day as per CoinMarketCap. On September 6, cryptocurrency prices are still up.
Bitcoin reached a new high of nearly $65,000 in April, fueled by liquidity, fast-money bets, and rising institutional demand. Encouraging comments from billionaire Elon Musk and the direct listing of cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase Global Inc. helped its course.
Despite the strengthening dollar, the major crypto asset has held onto its gains since late July, when it hit a low of $51.5k. Prices varied from $46,465 to $51,851, a 9-day high.
Despite the US dollar’s impressive recovery in London trade, investors are still unsure when the US central bank would begin asset reduction. As a whole, the on-chain sentiment remains optimistic, pointing to increases in spot exchange reserve are at a multi-year low.
Mitigating factors include a small outflow of Bitcoin to crypto exchanges and a decline in transaction counts. Thus, encouraging miners to reinvest gains from previous rallies.
Old Coins Matured and Accumulated
Following Bitcoin’s $10k to $3.8k price drop on March 13, 2020, the group of 12- to 18-month-old coins dropped from $10k to $3.8k. This cohort may have panic sold in March 2020.
12-18-month old coins matured and accumulated while Bitcoin stabilized around $30k to $40k, then rose to approximately $50k following the May 2021 crash.
According to Glassnode, bitcoins less than three months old are more likely to be spent during volatile times. However, a drop in HODL waves for new coins shows the market prefers to hoard overspend. Because just 15% of the currency supply is young, a severe decline is in play.
The crypto industry matures rapidly, with almost half of the currencies in circulation aged three months to three years.