Bitcoin soars to record high, surpasses $77,000 for the first time
Bitcoin's peak trading price reached $77,252 late Friday, with the current price standing at $76,522.
Bitcoin hit a new all-time high on Friday, surpassing $77,000, as reported by trading data from the Binance Cryptocurrency Exchange.
The peak trading price reached $77,252 late Friday, with the current price standing at $76,522.
Bitcoin's value continues to climb following Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election, with the cryptocurrency seeing a nearly 9% increase on Wednesday alone.
'World capital of Bitcoin'
This came shortly after the dollar surged and bitcoin reached a record high Wednesday, with global equity markets rallying as traders increasingly speculated on a potential victory for Donald Trump in the US presidential election.
Throughout his campaign, Trump promised to position the US as the "world capital of bitcoin and cryptocurrencies." In July, he highlighted cryptocurrency as pivotal to his vision of the country in the future during Saturday's Bitcoin Conference in Nashville.
The former president promised to ensure the government never sells its Bitcoin assets and establish a "strategic reserve" under his administration, predicting the digital currency could exceed gold's $16 trillion market capitalization.
“For too long our government has violated the cardinal rule that every bitcoiner knows by heart: Never sell your bitcoin… This afternoon I’m laying out my plan to ensure that the United States will be the crypto capital of the planet and the bitcoin superpower of the world, and we’ll get it done,” Trump said.
It is worth noting that Trump's campaign accepted donations in cryptocurrency.
This stood in stark contrast to his beliefs back in 2019, when he wrote on social media that Bitcoin's value is "based on thin air," and warned in 2021 that Crypto is a "disaster waiting to happen."
The United States currently holds approximately 212,000 Bitcoins, estimated to have a worth of around $15 billion, Forbes has lately reported, citing official data.