Bitcoin price: why did it exceed $60,000?

28.02.2024
Bitcoin price: why did it exceed $60,000?
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The price of the market's leading cryptocurrency continues to climb, and is now approaching its all-time high of $69,000, reached in November 2021.

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How high will bitcoin go? That's the question many are asking as the market's leading cryptocurrency broke the $60,000 barrier this Wednesday for the first time since November 2021. Back then, bitcoin hit its all-time high of $69,000.

While we wait to see whether Satoshi Nakamoto's invention will break the $69,000 mark again, here are the main reasons why bitcoin is making such progress:

The launch of Bitcoin ETFs in the US has significantly expanded Bitcoin's investor base. Since 11 January, nearly $7 billion has been injected into the markets via ETF Bitcoin Spot. Never before has an ETF launch, taking all assets together, collected so much. Some analysts are expecting a net inflow of $14bn or $15bn over the whole of 2024, but this could be much higher.

On the macroeconomic front, factors such as expectations of interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve have made bitcoin much more attractive compared with traditional assets.

In an environment where the attractiveness of traditional currencies and assets is diminishing due to inflation, geopolitical tensions and uncertainties surrounding the strength of the US dollar, bitcoin appears to be a reliable store of value.

The proximity to the Bitcoin halving scheduled for April 2024 is another key factor: the Bitcoin halving is a scheduled event that halves the issuance of new bitcoins. This event occurs approximately every four years (every 210,000 blocks, to be precise) and makes Bitcoin, which is in limited supply (21 million), even rarer. At each halving, the price of bitcoin has risen sharply.

Recent regulatory developments, particularly in the US and Europe (MiCA), have created a more favourable framework for the sector - the approval of Bitcoin Spot ETFs is one of them.

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Raphaël Bloch

Raphaël Bloch is CEO and co-founder of The Big Whale, an independent market intelligence platform on digital assets serving financial market participants through editorial coverage, research, a weekly briefing, and in-person events. He co-founded The Big Whale in April 2022. At the platform, he moderates and hosts institutional events bringing together banks, asset managers, custodians, and infrastructure providers on topics including staking, on-chain yield, stablecoins, DeFi lending, and tokenisation. He has moderated panels at events hosted in partnership with Bitwise, Everstake, Gemini, Morpho, Hexarq, Coinhouse, Delubac, Franklin Templeton, and the Ethereum Foundation, held in London and Paris between late 2025 and mid-2026.

Before founding The Big Whale, Bloch worked as a reporter at Les Echos from December 2016 to March 2020, then at L'Express from March 2020 to March 2022. He also previously worked at Reuters. Since September 2022, he has held a concurrent role as Business Analyst at BFM Business. He has been active in crypto journalism since 2016. He holds degrees from emlyon and the CFJ.

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