How Bitcoin crossed $10,000 milestone
The value of
one bitcoin has gone past $10,000. The prediction was right..
The virtual
currency reached the benchmark for the first time, just days after it passed
$9,000.
It caps a
remarkable rise in value for the crypto-currency, which was trading below
$1,000 at the start of the year.
Some experts
believe the asset still has far to soar, but others say it represents a
speculative bubble with nothing tangible at its core that could burst any time.
The total
value of all the bitcoins in existence has now surpassed $167bn.
Bitcoin
first reached $1,000 in late-2013 and then dipped significantly before starting
a volatile climb to its current value.
It is not
entirely clear what has driven the sudden rise in value, especially because the
past few weeks have been marked by action by some financial regulators to limit
its use.
One factor
that may have helped was the US-based derivatives marketplace operator CME
Group's announcement at the start of the month that it planned to launch a
Bitcoin futures product before the end of 2017, which bolstered confidence in
its prospects.
Another was
a decision to drop a controversial plan known as Segwit2x.
This would
have altered the way Bitcoin's underlying technology, the blockchain, worked,
to help it handle more transactions.
But the move
risked splitting the community.
Many
industry watchers believe the rapid rise in value will not be sustained and
expect its value to suddenly fall sharply.
Bitcoins
were first produced in 2009 and took a long time to become an accepted holder
of monetary value that could be swapped for real-world cash.
One early
transaction involved using 10,000 bitcoins to buy two pizzas.
The boom has
led to a general rise in many other virtual currencies.
One, known
as Ethereum, is now worth about $480, but at the start of 2017 each one was
worth only about $10.
Many others
are also trying to profit from the growing interest in crypto-currencies.
Image
caption Con artists are sending Bitcoin-based scams to phone users, pretending
to be from the news site CoinDesk
Many malware
writers are now seeking to install software on vulnerable websites that create
or "mine" the coins.
In addition,
scammers have sent fake text messages to people's phones, claiming they own
some of the digital currency, in an effort to tempt them into opening a
dangerous link.
Comments