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Bitcoin Rally Holds Around $63,700 Following 4th Block Reward Halving

Bitcoin had slumped to as low as $59,685 on Friday morning, then rebounded heading into the event.

Updated Apr 20, 2024, 1:44 a.m. Published Apr 20, 2024, 12:23 a.m.
BTC chart (CoinDesk data)
BTC chart (CoinDesk data)

Bitcoin held steady around $63,700 in the aftermath of the cryptocurrency's fourth halving, an event that upends the economics for the miners who power the Bitcoin ecosystem.

BTC recently barely moved from its level right before the 840,000th Bitcoin block was mined just as Saturday began in UTC time. Bitcoin had slumped as low as $59,685 on Friday before rebounding above $65,000.

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Read more: The Bitcoin Halving Is Here, and With It a Giant Surge in Transaction Fees

The halving has historically been a precursor to a rally in the price of bitcoin, with the last one, in May 2020, giving way to a run up from $9,500 to $65,000 during the subsequent year.

But this time, bitcoin has already embarked on a momentous rally to record highs, rising from $15,500 in late 2022 to $73,680, helped by optimism around the approval of spot bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. and then then the ensuing enthusiasm after they began trading in January.

On Thursday, JPMorgan said that it expected bitcoin to drop following the halving as it remained in "overbought conditions" based on the high level of open interest in bitcoin futures. Goldman Sachs added that in order for bitcoin to emulate the success of previous cycles following halving events, macro conditions need to be supportive of risk-taking.

Read more: Complete coverage of the fourth Bitcoin halving

Bitcoin has traded between $59,600 and $73,860 since Feb. 28 with the upside of the range being protected this week alongside the backdrop of rising conflict in Israel, which has had a knock-on effect across all capital markets.

A sell-off on April 12 from $71,000 to $60,000 wiped out $4 billion in open interest from the bitcoin market, according to Coinalyze. The figure across all exchanges excluding CME is $16.1 billion.

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Crypto market drowns in red as bitcoin falls to $68,000

bitcoin price chart (Behnam Norouzi/Unsplash/Modified by CoinDesk)

Traders are bracing for a heavy week of macroeconomic events, including Fed minutes and the core PCE inflation report.

What to know:

  • Bitcoin wilts, pushing the broader market into the red.
  • Losses have hit 85 out of the top 100 tokens.
  • The sell-off comes despite weaker U.S. inflation data that strengthened expectations for at least two Federal Reserve rate cuts.
  • Traders are bracing for a heavy week of macroeconomic events, including Fed minutes and the core PCE inflation report.