Bitcoin

(BTC) Price

£62,783.91 -4,515.83 (-4.94%)

Bitcoin (BTC) price

BTC - GBP
  • BTC - USD (United States Dollar)
  • BTC - EUR (Euro)
  • BTC - GBP (British Pound Sterling)
  • BTC - RUB (Russian Ruble)
£62,783.91 -4,515.83 (-4.94%)
0.00000000 BTC (00.00%)
Real Time Data

Market cap

£856,180,552,475

13,636,941 BTC

Volume (24H)

£28,844,031,234

459,418 BTC

Day's range

£62,680.54 - £67,824.16

Last trade

0.00100000 BTC

binance £71.70

Open price (24h)

£67,299.74

52 Weeks. Low - High

£27,215.87 - £72,193.04

Supply

19,693,128 BTC

Max supply

21,000,000 BTC

Latest Closing Price

Open/Close in UTC time

Date Close Price Open price Volume (24H) Market Cap Day's range
Dec 14, 2024
£59,689.15
£63,174.44
£28,844,031,234 25,315 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£59,689.15 £64,237.18 £59,689.15
Dec 15, 2024
£64,760.59
£59,689.15
£28,844,031,234 33,343 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£58,591.22 £64,898.10 £64,760.59
Dec 16, 2024
£70,101.45
£64,760.59
£28,844,031,234 52,423 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£64,760.59 £70,907.31 £70,101.45
Dec 17, 2024
£67,725.68
£70,101.45
£28,844,031,234 40,189 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£67,130.87 £70,222.11 £67,725.68
Dec 18, 2024
£67,743.11
£67,725.68
£28,844,031,234 61,434 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£66,726.19 £68,597.38 £67,743.11
Dec 19, 2024
£66,518.43
£67,743.11
£28,844,031,234 66,282 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£65,631.45 £69,540.01 £66,518.43
Dec 20, 2024
£67,257.61
£66,518.43
£28,844,031,234 73,991 BTC
£856,180,552,475
£64,335.83 £67,947.84 £67,257.61
More Historical Data

What is Bitcoin? 

Back in 2008, in the peak of the financial crisis, a whitepaper by a mysterious Satoshi Nakamoto emerged detailing an electronic peer to peer cash system that was completely decentralized with no servers or central authority. The idea of a digital payment solution wasn't new; it was tried by economists and engineers alike throughout the 90's. What Satoshi had done was to create a "trustless" system that operated without the need of a 3rd party to verify transactions. Satoshi had solved the "double spend" problem that had plagued economists for decades, giving birth to Bitcoin, a digital payments solution that might prove to be the next evolution for money and our monetary system. 

What makes this solution so unique is that Bitcoin, despite being digital, can't be forged, hacked or controlled by a single entity. This was achieved by creating the Blockchain, an incorruptible digital ledger of economic transactions. The Blockchain transparently records and verifies all transactions that take place on the Bitcoin network. By allowing information to be distributed but not copied, Blockchain technology created the backbone of a new type of internet. Today, the combined computing power of this global network is greater than the 500 biggest supercomputers combined times a ten-thousand. 

How is Bitcoin created? 

Bitcoins can only be created if users dedicate their computing power to solve a cryptographic puzzle. This is known as mining. As more and more users join this movement, the difficulty of these cryptographic puzzles adjusts itself, increasing as more computing power is dedicated by miners as a whole to solving these puzzles. This ensures that only a specific amount of Bitcoin can be created in a given amount of time. Today, large "mining farms" exist dedicating almost 3000 Megawatts of power towards mining. That's enough energy to power roughly 1 million homes. 

Bitcoin Price and Volatility 

In a short period of time, Bitcoin has become a household name. With the added media attention and institutional interest, the Bitcoin price has risen by over 700%. Bitcoin trading never stops, exchanges run 7 days a week, 24 hours a day and it has been doing so continuously for the last 8 years. Every 10 minutes, Bitcoin's heart beats and new transactions are processed. There is no closing price for Bitcoin, since the markets don’t close. It's a rolling average and in that trading, a market capitalization of around $15 billion is traded internationally. What is $15 billion for a global currency? Bitcoin is a guppy swimming in shark-infested waters. Compared to the $1 trillion traded in the conventional Foreign Exchange Markets each day, big investors get to go ahead and move Bitcoin's price around. This makes living on Bitcoin an absolute roller coaster. There were price fluctuations of up to 20% - 30% a day sometimes. Yet, as transactions rise, volumes go up, and volatility declines. If we compare Bitcoin's volatility to certain conventional currencies, for example, the Argentinian Peso, we understand that volatility is relative.     

Recently, the magnitude of Bitcoin's appreciation has led to debate about Bitcoin being a bubble. If we look at graphs for blue-chip technology stocks in the early 90's before the dot-com crash, they look curiously similar to those Bitcoins charts of today. 

 

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Type
Coin
Block
Mineable
Since
Jan 03, 2009
Algorithm
SHA256
Proof Type
PoW

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