Whiplash: Bitcoin Slides Below $6,500, Surges Above $7,100 in 8-Hour Span
Bitcoin traders might need a neck brace from watching Wednesday's price action.

Bitcoin traders might need a neck brace right now.
That’s because the price of the cryptocurrency took a sharp U-turn in the course of trading on Wednesday.
The day started quite dreary for HODLers. Candlesticks slowly and solemnly strode across the bitcoin chart in the upper half of the $6,000 range for much of the early morning hours.
Then, at precisely 7:51 a.m. ET, as New York traders were sitting on their desks and sugaring their coffees, another selloff began.
On Binance, the largest BTC market, 1,000 bitcoins changed hands in two minutes, with prices falling $61.60 to $6,509.91. It slipped below $6,500 on other exchanges.
Yet a minute later, 897 were traded on the exchange and prices seemed to stabilize at around $6,537. The lull was short-lived; another selloff with 986 bitcoins finding their way to new accounts.
At 8:31 a.m. ET, the rally began.
Buy orders flooded markets and bitcoin gained $74 in two minutes, closing at $6,595.94 at 8:32 a.m. The candlesticks that trudged through the mud minutes before suddenly had a quicker step. By 11:00 a.m., the cryptocurrency was trading hands at $6,900 apiece.
It took a few hours from there but at that point, the excitement was in the air. Bitcoin poked around the $7,200 resistance level at around 3:30 p.m. but didn’t have the gumption to break above.
Nonetheless, as New York equities markets close and volume tapers off, traders are once again eyeing that $7,200 like a snake who stumbled into a mouse hole.
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Bithumb admits to ‘serious flaws’ that left internal systems vulnerable to potential sabotage

The South Korean crypto exchange’s CEO Le Jae-won said the lack of proper controls led to the erroneous transfer of bitcoin worth more than $40 billion to customers. Most has been recovered.
What to know:
- Bithumb admitted that serious internal system flaws led it to mistakenly transfer about $40 billion in bitcoin to customers instead of a planned payout of roughly $428.
- The error briefly caused bitcoin prices on Bithumb to plunge 17 percent, prompted a probe by South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service and exposed gaps in the exchange's asset-matching and account-segregation controls.
- While Bithumb has recovered most of the coins, 1,786 bitcoins sold before accounts were frozen remain missing, intensifying lawmakers' concerns about weak oversight in one of the world's busiest crypto markets.











