Bitcoin to hit 100k by end of next year?

Bitcoin to hit 100k by end of next year?
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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Souvenir tokens representing cryptocurrency Bitcoin plunge into water in this illustration taken May 17, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

By Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON (Reuters) -Top cryptocurrency bitcoin could reach $100,000 by the end of 2024, Standard Chartered said on Monday, saying that the so-called "crypto winter" is over.

could gain from factors including recent turmoil in the banking sector, a stabilisation of risk assets as the U.S. Federal Reserve ends its interest rate-hiking cycle and improved profitability of crypto mining, Standard Chartered (OTC:)'s head of digital assets research Geoff Kendrick said in a note.

"While sources of uncertainty remain, we think the pathway to the USD 100,000 level is becoming clearer," Kendrick wrote.

Bitcoin has rallied so far this year, rising above $30,000 in April for the first time in ten months. Its gains represent a partial recovery after trillions of dollars were wiped from the crypto sector in 2022, as central banks hiked rates and a string of crypto firms imploded.

Predictions of sky-high valuations have been commonplace during bitcoin's past rallies. A Citi analyst said in November 2020 that bitcoin could climb as high as $318,000 by the end of 2022. It closed last year down about 65% at $16,500.

In Monday's note, Standard Chartered said that bitcoin has benefited from its status as a "branded safe haven, a perceived relative store of value and a means of remittance."

Kendrick said the European Parliament's backing of the European Union's first set of rules to regulate crypto asset markets "should provide a tailwind" for bitcoin.

JPMorgan (NYSE:) said in a note on April 5 that a technical change to the bitcoin blockchain in April 2024, known as its "halving", could boost its price by making it more expensive to produce, causing a "positive psychological effect".

JPMorgan said that cryptocurrency prices have already benefited from crypto enthusiasts interpreting the recent U.S. banking crisis as a "vindication of the crypto ecosystem". Crypto supporters say stablecoins are "less susceptible to runs", JPMorgan said.

U.S. regulators have previously told banks to be alert for liquidity risks coming from crypto-related deposits, such as stablecoin reserves, which could be subject to rapid outflows.

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01 June 2023
Nobody should suggest using a Raspberry Pi for running a Bitcoin node in 2023!!! \ stacker news ~bitcoin
rPi 4 are Weak, NOT cheap, Old (2019), and NOT power efficient (compared to a modern low voltage CPU) I've been testing almost every Node in a box on rPi, and all the bad experiences below did happen to me at least once. rPi were designed in and sold as cheap toys to learn and experiment on DIY project using GPIO pins. They need assembly, heatsinks, screwing fans, plugging cables to the right PIN, ect ect. Come with cheap unpredictable fans that often don't last. The 5v3A power supply that comes with it most of the time is cheap and breaks. rPi only takes in 5 volts over that USB-C, some high quality power supply delivers ~4.9v and will trigger under voltage instability and throttling. Most newer, high quality power supply WILL NOT WORK, as they will try to jump up the voltage to 9, 12 or 20v instead of staying on 5v 5 volts mean that a high quality USB cable of relatively short length is required to make sure there are no voltage drop on that low voltage line. It's near impossible to find a charger that is above 2 AMP while the rPi needs 3A depending on the attached storage. Installing the OS on an SD card will lead to more corruption if the power is lost to the rPI The SD card has low and unpredictable write count. The SD card will become read only after a while. There is no way to attach HDD storage without a extra active USB to SATA adapter. This USB adapter is unpredictable and unreliable, might break on you, Might only work at USB 2.0 Speed No way to install the hard drive in a clean way, Most of the time the drive is left dangling on it's cable or is being taped to the bottom of the the rPi casing. The USB to SATA interface is slower than direct NVME or SATA connection. Being digitally sovereign is not ONLY about running a Bitcoin node to verify your transactions. Doing ANYTHING more than running a Bitcoin Core and a light electrum server (electrs) to verify only a small personal wallet will tax your rPi beyond it's limit. For about 100$ There are used, field test, computers that are about the same size, made of metal, 10 times more powerful, 2+ times the ram, Have ports for direct attachment of SATA and NVME drive. Wifi, Bluetooth, Have a very reliable power supply. All you might want to do it swap the HDD for a bigger 1 or 2tb one and boot from a USB stick to install a new Linux OS. The Electricity savings are ridiculously not worth it give the hassle. Each savings of 5 watts is equal to (0.005kwh) * 0.07 * 24 * 365 = $3.00 Link to Optiplex Micro search : https://www.amazon.com/s?k=optiplex+micro&s=price-asc-rank&crid=7OE2N02FZZIG&qid=1685628318&sprefix=optiplex+micro%2Caps%2C131&ref=srstprice-asc-rank [25 comments]
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