`It`s just getting started` analyst on Bitcoin rockets to record high as investors cheer ETFs
Bitcoin soared to a record high on March 06, fueled by investors pouring money into newly created spot exchange-traded funds in the U.S. The world's largest cryptocurrency hit a high of $69,202, topping an all-time peak reached in November of 2021. It then moved lower later in Tuesday’s session. Bitcoin’s surge is driven by “simple supply and demand,” says Ben Laidler, global markets strategist at eToro, and comes just weeks after the Securities and Exchange Commission approved 11 spot bitcoin ETFs in late January. Supply of bitcoin is limited to 21 million, of which 19 million have already been mined. That’s helped drive demand, along with the prospect of the U.S. Federal Reserve cutting interest rates, which often prompts investors to divert capital into higher-yielding, volatile assets. Bitcoin is up 160% since October, with more than one-third of its rise coming in February alone. That marks a sharp contrast to 2022, when the market was beaten into an 18-month-long crypto winter, plagued by a string of high-profile corporate bankruptcies and scandals. Net flows into the 10 largest U.S. spot bitcoin funds reached $2.17 billion last week, according to LSEG data.