Bitcoin USD serves as the benchmark for cryptocurrency trading, representing Bitcoin's value in US Dollars as the world's first decentralized digital currency. It has revolutionized investor perceptions of money and digital assets through high liquidity, global accessibility, and growing adoption by traders, institutions, and long-term investors. Unlike traditional investments like the Bharat Coking Coal IPO, which offer stability tied to government-backed industrial enterprises, Bitcoin operates independently of central banks, exposing investors to a global system unaffected by local cycles but prone to volatility.
Key price influencers include market sentiment from social media and news, regulatory policies, institutional adoption by corporations and hedge funds, and technological advancements in blockchain and payments. Traded on multiple exchanges, Bitcoin USD enables short-term trading on volatility or long-term holding as an inflation hedge.
Risks encompass extreme price swings, regulatory uncertainty, and security vulnerabilities like hacks. In contrast, the Bharat Coking Coal IPO faces more predictable risks from domestic demand and operations. Investors can diversify by blending Bitcoin USD's high-growth potential with stable assets like the Bharat Coking Coal IPO for balanced portfolios leveraging innovation and reliability.
Bitcoin's price rebounded sharply, reaching a high of $94,400—its highest since January 5—after the Senate Banking Committee published the text of the CLARITY Act. The BTC/USD pair surged over 17% from its November low of $80,465, trading around $94,330. Analyst Crispus Nyaga recommends buying BTC/USD with a take-profit at $100,000 and stop-loss at $90,000 (timeline: 1-2 days), while suggesting a sell with take-profit at $90,000 and stop-loss at $100,000.
The rally was fueled by the CLARITY Act, advancing to markup on Thursday, which separates roles between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), granting the latter more duties—seen as positive for crypto clarity. Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw millions in inflows this week, reversing last week's outflows and signaling returning institutional demand. Additionally, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a drop in core Consumer Price Index (CPI) for December, amid falling energy prices and mortgage rates, boosting prospects for a dovish Federal Reserve tone.
Upcoming catalysts include speeches by Fed officials Stephen Miran, Raphael Bostic, and Anna Poulson on recent macro data, plus a Supreme Court ruling on Donald Trump's tariffs—potentially ending them and curbing inflation, which would be bullish for Bitcoin. Technically, BTC/USD remains in a strong uptrend above the 50-day EMA, forming an ascending triangle pattern targeting $100,000 resistance.
Germany’s second-largest bank, DZ Bank, has entered the digital asset market by approving Bitcoin and cryptocurrency trading following authorization under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR). The clearance was granted by Germany’s financial watchdog, BaFin, at the end of December 2025, enabling DZ Bank to operate a crypto trading platform within the EU framework. The bank launched its meinKrypto platform, integrated into the VR Banking App used by Volksbanken and Raiffeisenbanken customers across Germany.
MeinKrypto allows customers to buy, sell, and hold major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC), Litecoin (LTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Cardano (ADA) directly through familiar banking interfaces, eliminating the need for private key management or external exchanges. The platform resembles traditional online banking and targets self-directed investors, emphasizing transparency under MiCAR. Technical partners include Boerse Stuttgart Digital Custody for secure asset safeguarding, EUWAX for trade execution, and Atruvia for IT integration, enabling smaller banks to offer services without independent infrastructure.
The rollout is phased, with each cooperative bank notifying BaFin and opting in based on customer strategy and risk profile. Industry surveys indicate over one-third of cooperative banks plan to adopt meinKrypto, reflecting strong retail demand for regulated Bitcoin and crypto access. DZ Bank provides the regulatory and technical backbone while local banks handle customer relations.
Crypto payroll involves paying salaries in blockchain-based digital currencies like stablecoins or Bitcoin (BTC), either fully, partially, or via fiat-to-crypto conversion at payment. It integrates with traditional systems for tax reporting and records, but heavy regulations on wages—ensuring tax withholding, minimum wage compliance, worker protections, and contract enforcement—make clear rules essential. Uncertainty in classifying digital assets as securities, commodities, or payments has caused caution among payroll providers, risking penalties without defined oversight.
Recent U.S. laws address this: the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act) sets reserve, disclosure, and licensing standards for stablecoins as payment instruments. On July 17, 2025, the House passed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act) with bipartisan support, clarifying SEC and CFTC authority over assets to reduce uncertainty. In Europe, the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation imposes rules on crypto providers and stablecoin issuers, including capital and consumer protections. These frameworks enable crypto in payroll without mandating it, favoring stablecoins for their fiat-pegged stability over Bitcoin's volatility.
Stablecoins, backed by reserves like cash or government securities, simplify valuation, accounting, and tax reporting by aligning with fiat salaries, treated as payment tools with redemption rights. Bitcoin's price fluctuations complicate budgeting, require precise market-value tracking at payment, and trigger capital gains taxes on conversion, increasing administrative burdens. Regulated as speculative assets, Bitcoin lacks payroll-specific treatment, relying on niche providers versus mainstream stablecoin infrastructure from banks and fintechs. Employers must still meet documentation, social security, and audit obligations, treating crypto as a payment channel.
Bitcoin briefly surpassed $95,000 before cooling off on Wednesday morning, as traders anticipated major regulatory progress. Ethereum rose above $3,300, up 10%, signaling a broader rally across digital assets. Bitcoin is up about 5% in 2026 but remains roughly 27% below its October peak above $126,000.
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is set for markup this week in Congress, potentially clarifying regulations and positioning the US as a leader in digital innovation. The bill aims to delineate oversight between the SEC and CFTC, resolving years of turf wars that have clouded crypto operations.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins described it as an opportunity to "upgrade financial markets for the 21st century," attracting more institutional money. For retail traders, it promises fewer scams, stronger safeguards, legitimate exchanges, and reduced legal risks, fostering optimism backed by policy advancements.
Bitcoin's price surged above $96,000 on Tuesday, January 13, 2026, reaching a two-month high and holding above $95,000 after a 4%+ jump in 24 hours. The rally followed December CPI data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, showing 0.3% monthly and 2.7% year-over-year inflation, easing concerns and stabilizing expectations for the Federal Reserve to maintain rates at 350-375 basis points (97.2% probability per FedWatchTool).
Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw strong inflows of $753.8 million on Tuesday—the highest in 2026—totaling $870.5 million over two sessions, ending a two-week outflow streak. Fidelity’s FBTC led with $111.70 million and $351.40 million, followed by BlackRock’s IBIT ($55.6 million) and Grayscale’s GBTC ($64 million). Cumulative inflows exceeded $57.63 billion, boosting demand and pushing Bitcoin's market cap to $1.9 trillion.
The breakout from a converging triangle pattern since November 2025, with $61 billion in 24-hour volume, exceeded the November 17 high of $95,950. Key resistances are $96,500 and $98,000, with support at $94,000 and $95,000. Traders eye a push to $100,000 amid institutional demand and stable macro conditions.
Trade Leveraged Crypto Futures In-App via Binance Wallet & Aster
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www.coindesk.com
Bitcoin Meteo
Binance Wallet launched a feature on Wednesday, integrating with decentralized exchange Aster—the second-largest perpetuals platform with $6.74 billion in 24-hour volume—to enable leveraged futures trading directly from users' self-custody wallets on BNB Smart Chain. This allows trading cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC at $97,447.39) and Ether (ETH at $3,379.38), plus equities such as Apple (AAPL) and Nvidia (NVDA), and the Invesco QQQ ETF, using collateral like BNB and Tether's USDT. Users retain full asset control, blending CeFi speed with DeFi security, amid risks highlighted by FTX's 2022 collapse. Winson Liu, Binance Wallet's global lead, called it a step toward sophisticated tools in Web3. The web-interface feature is the first in the Binance ecosystem, excluding the centralized exchange's futures platform, potentially attracting users from Binance's 200 million base.
KuCoin achieved a record $1.25 trillion in trading volume for 2025, averaging $114 billion monthly, capturing an all-time high centralized exchange market share as volumes outpaced the broader crypto market. Spot and derivatives each exceeded $500 billion, with altcoins dominating activity beyond BTC and ETH.
Bybit Pay partnered with Peru's Yape and Plin digital wallets, each reaching 14 million users, to enable crypto payments (stablecoins and majors like BTC) automatically converted to Peruvian soles at point-of-sale, expanding in Latin America after Brazil and Argentina ties.
Bitcoin surged over 4% on Wednesday, breaking above $95,000, fueled by lower-than-expected US inflation data. This reinforced market expectations that the Federal Reserve will continue cutting interest rates this year, boosting overall crypto sentiment.
Ethereum climbed more than 7% to $3,330 during the same period, reflecting broader market gains. Over $688 million in crypto derivatives positions were liquidated in the prior 24 hours, with short sellers bearing the brunt of the losses.
The rally also highlighted regulatory optimism, as seen in Ripple (XRP)'s price rise amid the positive inflation data. Additional industry news included Prosperity Life Group naming Mark Williams as VP of National Accounts, and Salt Financial's collaboration with FTSE Russell on risk-managed index solutions.
Corporate Bitcoin accumulation has outpaced new supply, with companies adding a net 260,000 BTC to balance sheets over the past six months—more than three times the 82,000 BTC mined globally. Treasuries grew from 854,000 to 1.11 million BTC, averaging 43,000 BTC monthly purchases, absorbing over three times daily miner output of 450 BTC. Holdings are concentrated, led by Strategy (co-founded by Michael Saylor) with 687,410 BTC (60% of corporate total, valued at $65.5 billion). Strategy resumed buying, acquiring 13,627 BTC from January 5 to 11—its largest since July. MARA Holdings follows with 53,250 BTC ($5 billion).
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have intensified supply pressure, purchasing over 100% of new issuance since early 2024. In 2025, U.S. ETFs saw $22 billion inflows, led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust; 2026 inflows remain modestly positive.
Strive’s stock fell nearly 12% on Tuesday after announcing an all-stock acquisition of Semler Scientific, adding 5,048.1 BTC to Strive’s 7,749.8 BTC (post-123 BTC purchase), totaling 12,797.9 BTC (11th-largest holder). Plans include monetizing Semler’s business, retiring a $100 million convertible note and $20 million Coinbase loan, and a 1-for-20 reverse stock split. Such pivots show volatility: Strive surged over 2,000% after May 7 announcement (from $0.61 to $13.01 by May 22), now at $0.97; Semler rose from $30 to $67 by December 2024 after May adoption, now ~$20.
Over the past six months, public and private companies accumulated 260,000 BTC in their treasuries, absorbing three times the new supply produced by miners (82,000 BTC), according to Glassnode data. Monthly net inflows averaged 43,000 BTC, valued at about $25 billion. Corporate Bitcoin holdings expanded rapidly from 854,000 BTC to 1.11 million BTC, marking one of the fastest growth periods on record. Across structured entities, 4.06 million BTC is held, with ETFs and funds leading at 1.49 million BTC, followed by public companies at over 1.1 million BTC; the rest is owned by governments, private firms, DeFi contracts, and custodians.
Bitcoin's current price stands at $96,468, with 24-hour volatility of 1.1%, a market cap of $1.93 trillion, and 24-hour volume of $68.24 billion. Top corporate holders include Strategy with 687,410 BTC (60% of corporate total), funded via equity and debt; MARA Holdings at 53,250 BTC from mining retention; Twenty One Capital with 43,514 BTC since its December 2025 launch via merger with Cantor Equity Partners; and Japan's Metaplanet at 35,102 BTC, accumulated since 2024 to hedge inflation. Miners add 450 BTC daily, but corporate absorption outpaces this, reducing liquid supply.
The article also highlights Bitcoin Hyper (HYPER), a Layer 2 solution addressing Bitcoin's scalability issues, with its presale token at $0.013575 after raising $30.4 million.
Bitcoin's relief rally gained momentum yesterday, with prices moving toward outlined targets amid low liquidity and volume, prompting caution as pumps without sustained volume signal risks. The rally squeezed nearly $600 million in shorts, totaling $686 million in liquidations, partly driving the upside from $89,000. Spot buyers entered significantly only at $93,000, indicating the move was accelerated by short squeezes flipping to market buys.
Short-term sentiment remains bullish, but medium- to high-timeframe views are bearish, approaching key resistance zones. The long-to-short ratio is balanced, with funding rates slightly negative, reflecting uncertainty. Daily exchange volume trends downward, needing multiple days or weeks of pickup for real momentum.
A poll shows 57% believe the relief rally is nearly over, versus views of a silent new bull run or 2026 super cycle, or a ranging market. Upcoming data includes January 14th retail sales and existing home sales, plus tomorrow's initial jobless claims, following expected CPI results. Deltas on High Block Capital are positive for BTC, ETH, and Solana.
MicroStrategy recently acquired an additional 1,287 Bitcoin for approximately $116 million, at a price of about $90,000 per coin. This purchase increases their total holdings to 673,783 Bitcoin, representing 3% of Bitcoin's total supply of 21 million coins, effectively locking them off the market.
The move highlights ongoing corporate accumulation of Bitcoin amid discussions on its rising value and accessibility. Michael Saylor, associated with MicroStrategy, is noted for buying more Bitcoin, emphasizing that the focus is not just on price appreciation but on securing access before prices surge further. Critics question the hoarding strategy, contrasting it with Bitcoin's ethos of being accessible to everyone.
Bitcoin Price Surge
Last week, Bitcoin (BTC) regained momentum, briefly reaching 93,000 USD within a range of 80,600 to 95,000 USD. On Tuesday evening, it broke above 96,300 USD before a slight correction. As of writing, BTC trades at 95,000 USD, up 3.5% in the last 24 hours—the first time at these levels since November last year. Ethereum (ETH) hit 3,300 USD, up 6.2%, while Cardano (ADA) rose 7.5% above 0.42 USD.
Market Factors and Optimism
The move suggests a potential range breakout, fueled by record highs in the S&P 500, signaling investor optimism. Speculation grows for BTC to reclaim 100,000 USD. Regulatory progress includes the upcoming CLARITY Act; SEC President Paul Atkins praised it on X, stating, "The most important thing we can do now for investors is to get crypto-asset markets out of the regulatory gray area."
Geopolitical Tensions
Escalating Iran unrest, with at least 734 protesters killed since December 28 last year per Iran Human Rights, raises US intervention risks. Donald Trump urged Iranians to protest on Truth Social, canceled meetings with officials, and noted allies should leave. In June 2025, US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites led to an Israel ceasefire. A potential new intervention could boost markets.
ETF Inflows and Liquidations
Bitcoin ETFs saw 754 million USD in net inflows on Tuesday. Crypto derivatives liquidations totaled 685.5 million USD in 24 hours, with 86.5% from short positions. Despite Trump pressure, the Fed may hike rates.
Bitfarms BITF Evolves BTC Digging into ML Hubs, Super Compute
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www.marketbeat.com
Bitcoin Meteo
Bitfarms Ltd. (NASDAQ: BITF), a vertically integrated Bitcoin mining company, announced on January 14, 2026, a strategic pivot from Bitcoin mining to high-performance computing (HPC) and AI data centers, targeting hyperscalers and GPU-as-a-service opportunities. Executives, including COO Liam Wilson and CFO Jonathan Merne, emphasized that infrastructure, not chips, is the key constraint amid rising AI demand, with data center lease rates surging 12% annually since 2022 and projected power shortfalls by 2030. Bitcoin operations continue to generate about $8 million monthly, funding investments without straining the balance sheet.
The company is designing 99% of its 2026–27 portfolio for NVIDIA's next-gen Vera Rubin GPUs, favoring cooler regions like Pennsylvania, Washington, and Quebec for lower power usage effectiveness (PUE) of 1.2–1.3 versus 1.4–1.5 in hotter areas like Texas. Key U.S. sites include: Moses Lake, Washington (18 MW, potential GPU-as-a-service yielding higher income than Bitcoin mining); Panther Creek, Pennsylvania (350 MW secured, expandable to 500+ MW, $200M Macquarie facility); Sharon, Pennsylvania (110 MW, full substation by end-2026); Quebec (170 MW renewable hydropower, convertible to HPC); and Scrubgrass, Pennsylvania (potential 1.3 GW gigacampus by 2028).
Financed by $590M convertible proceeds, $750M unencumbered liquidity, and the Macquarie facility, Bitfarms expects notice to proceed (NTP) for Moses Lake, Sharon, and Panther Creek in H2 2026, with revenue by late 2027. Corporate shifts include exiting Latin America via Paso Pe sale, adopting U.S. GAAP for 2024–2025, opening a New York City office, and potential U.S. redomiciliation in 2026.
U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) recorded their largest daily inflows in three months on Tuesday, with $753.7 million in net inflows—the strongest single-day total since Oct. 7—signaling a return of institutional demand amid year-end portfolio rebalancing and rotation into risk assets, according to data from SoSoValue. Fidelity’s FBTC led with $351 million, followed by Bitwise’s BITB at $159 million and BlackRock’s IBIT at $126 million. This pickup follows a subdued end to 2025, driven by tax-related selling and risk-off positioning that reduced allocations to crypto products.
Ether-linked funds also saw renewed interest, posting a combined $130 million in net inflows across five U.S. spot ether ETFs, reflecting broader crypto market recovery. Improving macro signals bolstered sentiment: the latest U.S. consumer price index (CPI) data indicated cooling inflation, raising expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts later this year—a historically supportive backdrop for risk assets.
Crypto prices rose in tandem. Bitcoin gained about 3% over the past 24 hours to near $94,600, while ether climbed more than 6% to around $3,320, outperforming as demand expanded beyond bitcoin.
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U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest daily inflows in three months, with $753.7 million on Tuesday, the strongest since Oct. 7, per SoSoValue data. This signals renewed institutional demand after a subdued end to 2025 due to tax-related selling and risk-off positioning. Fidelity’s FBTC led with $351 million, followed by Bitwise’s BITB ($159 million) and BlackRock’s IBIT ($126 million). U.S. spot ether ETFs saw $130 million in net inflows across five products, reflecting broader crypto recovery.
Improving macro signals bolstered sentiment, as the latest U.S. consumer price index showed cooling inflation, raising expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts later this year. Bitcoin rose 3% to near $94,600, while ether gained over 6% to around $3,320.
KuCoin achieved a record centralized exchange market share in 2025, with over $1.25 trillion in total trading volume—averaging $114 billion monthly. Spot and derivatives each exceeded $500 billion, with altcoins dominating activity amid slower overall crypto volumes.
Bitcoin extended its rally past $97,000 during U.S. market hours on Wednesday, boosting related equities like Strategy (up over 8%). Investors sought haven assets, including gold, silver, and Bitcoin, amid a criminal investigation into Fed Chair Jerome Powell. (Dec 22, 2025)