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CoinDesk Weekly Recap: Finally, the Bitcoin Rally

After weeks of plateau, this week we saw an upswing in prices and a return to post-election crypto confidence. Here’s how CoinDesk reported the news that mattered.

Apr 25, 2025, 4:40 p.m.
A mesmerizing Bitcoin animation, right next to an art gallery. (Credit: Tom Carreras)

After several weeks on a plateau, bitcoin saw some action this week, climbing to more than $95,000 at press time. It was up 12% on the work-week, buoyed by better macro news and a feeling that the worst of tariff-mania may be over.

The CoinDesk 20 — which tracks about 80% of crypto market cap — jumped 10%-plus in the last five days.

In an interview with CoinDesk’s Sam Reynolds, Coinbase Institutional's John D’Agostino attributed the rally to institutions and sovereign wealth funds accumulating bitcoin. Retail traders, by contrast, were tending to exit bitcoin ETFs, he said.

Institutions continued to back bitcoin-accumulation vehicles. On Wednesday, Strike CEO Jack Mallers and Cantor Fitzgerald’s Brandon Lutnick unveiled Twenty One Capital, a new bitcoin investment company backed by Tether, Bitfinex, and SoftBank. Twenty One will have the third largest bitcoin corporate treasury with 42,000 BTC, Reynolds and Francisco Rodrigues reported.

There was increasing evidence from the options markets that traders are willing to hold BTC through market swings, which explains why bitcoin held relatively steady when stocks and bonds were diving in recent weeks. CoinDesk’s market wizard Omkar Godbole reported on that.

Bitcoin became the fifth most-valuable of all financial assets this week, surpassing Google’s market cap for the first time. Not bad for a protocol that started as a hobby among cypherpunks 20 years ago.

In other news, Zora’s much-hyped token launch sagged a little on debut. Analysts said traders were weary of so-called “VC tokens” with relatively little liquidity. “The $ZORA launch highlights a recurring issue in Web3: overpromising and underdelivering,” Min Jung, a research analyst at Presto, told markets reporter Shaurya Malwa.

Ouch.

But rising prices for core crypto assets is opening space for expansive Web 3 ideas. This week, the hit British TV series Peaky Blinders launched a blockchain-based video game and Web3 “ecosystem,” for instance. And, in a shift from a year ago, we saw plenty of other gaming and cultural-crypto news announcements.

Still, if you had to pick two winners in the current market, you’d have to go for bitcoin and… stablecoins (there are going to be hundreds of them soon). This week, USDC-issuer Circle announced a new global payments and remittances network (Ian Allison reported), and Coinbase free conversion between U.S. dollars and PayPal's PYUSD stablecoin.

You can’t go really too far wrong — though it’s not investment advice —accumulating bitcoin, and paying in stables.

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U.S. Hours Account for Nearly All of Bitcoin’s November Losses

Eggs with hand-drawn anxious faces symbolizing market fears

BTC drifts or stabilizes during Asia trading hours, softens slightly during the European handover and then absorbs most of its losses once U.S. equity markets open.

Lo que debes saber:

  • Bitcoin's November selloff is primarily occurring during U.S. trading hours, aligning it more with tech stocks than with other cryptocurrencies.
  • U.S. trading sessions have seen nearly a 30% decline in Bitcoin, while Asian and European sessions have remained relatively stable or slightly negative.
  • The market volatility is driven by concerns over U.S. monetary policy, with both Bitcoin and tech stocks affected by expectations of Federal Reserve actions.