Bitcoin recovered to above the $18,500 levels at press-time after plunging as low as $16,351.03 last week on Thursday.
What Happened: Blockchain analytics firm Glassnode tweeted Sunday that the mining difficulty for the apex cryptocurrency rose to 8.9%, which is below 4.4% of Bitcoin’s all-time high value.
#Bitcoin mining difficulty increased by 8.9% today.
It is now only 4.4% below its ATH.
Chart: https://t.co/qtmuDmTfGS pic.twitter.com/1eX63yBAgc
— glassnode (@glassnode) November 29, 2020
An increase in mining difficulty preceded the bull cycles of 2013 and 2016, Cointelegraph reported.
Other major altcoins followed Bitcoin’s lead with Ethereum (ETH) rising 8.06% to $582.80, XRP rising 2.22% to $0.625, and Chainlink (LINK) rising 7.02% to $13.98 in a 24-hour period leading up to press time.
Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Litecoin rose 4.94% and 6.81% to $289.26 and $79.15, respectively.
Why It Matters: Cryptocurrencies have been garnering increased interest from institutional investors, which has fueled a spike in Bitcoin prices.
On Sunday, Guggenheim Strategic Opportunities Fund (NYSE: GOF) said it was considering exposure to the largest cryptocurrency by market cap.
Guggenheim Partners — with $295 billion under management — is considering investing up to 10% of the Macro Opportunities Fund’s net asset value in Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (OTC: GBTC).
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust closed 9.73% at $18.83 on Friday. On the same day, Grayscale Ethereum Trust (OTC: ETHE) closed 11.9% lower at $85.06, and Grayscale Bitcoin Cash Trust (OTC: BCHG) closed 16.08% lower at $28.50.
Price Action: Bitcoin traded 4% higher at $18,534.80 at press time.
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