|

Crypto week ahead: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple, Chainlink [Video]

- Overview on recent sell-off in crypto (00:00).

- Bitcoin (2:06).

- Ethereum (6:15).

- Ripple (10:21).

- Chainlink (13:06).

- Matric (16:28).

- Dogecoin (18:05).

- Stellar (19:11).

- Hedera Hasgraph (20:26).

Author

Anthony Cheung

Anthony has spent over a decade working at the forefront of financial news.

More from Anthony Cheung
Share:

Editor's Picks

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP recovery slows amid incessant capital outflows

The cryptocurrency remains in a broader corrective bias on Friday, despite majors such as Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Ripple (XRP) holding slightly higher than early-week support levels.

Cardano: Whale selling, cautious derivatives limit ADA rebound

Cardano is trading near $0.170 at the time of writing on Friday after staging a modest rebound from last week's sharp correction. However, the recovery remains fragile as large holders have resumed reducing their positions, adding fresh selling pressure to ADA.

Experts agree: Bitcoin nears bottom, but weak demand raises doubts

Bitcoin (BTC) is trading above $63,000 at the time of writing on Friday after rebounding from the key 200-week Simple Moving Average (SMA) near $62,000, a level widely viewed as key long-term support.

Pi Network Price Forecast: Bulls attempt comeback as bearish strength fades

Pi Network is trading at around $0.120 on Friday after a modest recovery the previous day. Despite this recent rebound, traders should be cautious as a scheduled unlock of 14.8 million PI tokens on Friday could limit the token's recovery potential by increasing market supply.

Experts agree: Bitcoin nears bottom, but weak demand raises doubts
Bitcoin (BTC) is trading above $63,000 at the time of writing on Friday after rebounding from the key 200-week Simple Moving Average (SMA) near $62,000, a level widely viewed as key long-term support. The recovery may suggest that Bitcoin has found a floor after a sharp correction that spanned more than a month, but some warning signs persist.