The price of bitcoin is the highest in Zimbabwe which reached $13,500 at the time of the article being published; this is due to the conflicts happening in the country; for people in Zimbabwe bitcoin is seen as a safer option; the US dollar and South African rand also trade for approximately twice their price in the country. Source
A consensus over the upcoming bitcoin split was not reached and the plan was cancelled; the hope was for a new version that could handle double the number of transactions; upon hearing the news bitcoin’s value shot up to over $7,800; the current version can only handle about five transactions per second and to compete with names like PayPal and Visa that will need to change at some point in the future. Source.
While regulators have shut down exchanges the market is still showing signs of life as investors are trading bitcoin and buying into ICOs; investors are using the price over the counter market to buy and sell cryptocurrencies; investors are also using messaging apps like WeChat and Telegram to get deals done; bitcoin miners are where the authorities have found greater success as there has been a big hit to miners since the crackdown occurred. Source.
Bitcoin has increased over 550% this year and many firms are taking an increased interest in the cryptocurrency; CME Group launching futures contracts for bitcoin is just one example; the WSJ looks at what futures contracts for bitcoin will potentially mean for the market. Source
Bill Miller discusses his $154 million hedge fund MVP 1 and its 30% allocation to bitcoin in a Wall Street Journal article; the fund is up 72.5% this year and according to a letter to investors the fund paid an average price of $350 per bitcoin; while his fund has done well he is aware of the risks that bitcoin could go to zero, providing his perspective in the article. Source
With the price of bitcoin increasing as of late there have been increasing amount of people coming out stating that it is a bubble; conversely there are enthusiasts who claim that people simply don't understand the cryptocurrency; the WSJ reflects on recent bitcoin news and shares the wide variety of perspectives from their readers. Source
Bram Cohen is looking to address the cost of electricity in bitcoin transactions; he invented BitTorrent, a peer to peer file transfer protocol and is launching a new company called Chia Network; according to TechCrunch, they plan to launch a cryptocurrency based on proofs of time and storage instead of bitcoin’s proofs which burn significant amounts of electricity. Source
After being ordered to shut down by regulators China’s bitcoin exchanges are pivoting to the over the counter market; OKEx and Huobi Pro announced they will introduce P2P trading that supports fiat currencies according to CoinDesk; Huobi Pro might also look to expand overseas. Source.
CME Group announced today that they plan to offer bitcoin futures by the end of the year which is a change from what they said just a month ago; others like Cboe Global Markets said earlier in the year it plans to do the same by early 2018; the move by exchanges will open up the bitcoin market to professional traders and institutional investors. Source
Speaking at the Financial Investment Initiative event the former founder of PayPal thinks that bitcoin detractors could be underestimating the currency’s potential; as CoinDesk reports, “underestimating [it] especially because ... it's like a reserve form of money, it's like gold, and it's just a store of value. You don't need to use it to make payments."; he has in the past criticized bitcoin and is not bullish on all cryptocurrencies. Source.