Bitcoin transaction value hits yearly high with $25B moved
Bitcoin holders moved over 367,000 BTC on May 18, worth over $25 billion, recording a yearly high in the value of Bitcoin transactions.
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Bitcoin holders moved over 367,000 BTC on May 18, worth over $25 billion, recording a yearly high in the value of Bitcoin transactions.
The change in regulatory stance marks the end of a ban on crypto use in the country in place since 2014.
Transactions attributed to the Runes protocol accounted for over 50% of all Bitcoin transactions between April 20 and 24; however, by May 2, this figure had dropped to 11.1%.
The founder of Digital Bitcoin Art and Assets believes that smart contracts on Bitcoin could solve the myriad problems created by Ordinals.
This article delves into the origins of Bitcoin Pizza Day, its significance, and its impact on the cryptocurrency landscape.
Despite the consolidation happening in the Bitcoin market, the leading cryptocurrency has emerged as an efficient settlement network based on the low fees charged. (Read More)
Taproot, Bitcoin's most recent significant update, is more popular among wallets than among exchanges in the ecosystem.
This version included, among other things, privacy-oriented improvements, implying that legally regulated bitcoin (BTC) exchanges may not be greatly motivated to adopt it.
Taproot transactions, on the other hand, are supported by an increasing number of wallets, allowing users to receive or spend bitcoins. Taproot is used by 17 of the top 32 wallets for transferring or receiving bitcoins.
Exchanges Aren't Crazy About Taproot...
On the exchange side, Taproot's adoption isn't looking good, with one of the top 50 exchanges being a little-known P2P exchange (similar to localbitcoins) named Agoradesk.
Exchanges may be hesitant to accept bitcoin deposits sent to Taproot addresses because this feature of Bitcoin is known to promote user privacy while also preventing blockchain examination.
Why are exchanges avoiding it?
Because exchanges must comply with financial regulations in every nation where they operate, private transactions may put them in a position where they are asked to pass over information on a transaction, and do not have it.
What remains unclear is why some of these exchanges offer other privacy coins but not taproot for Bitcoin.
The best guess explanation I have for this is that privacy coins that have been listed for years don't upset enforcers nearly as much as converting Bitcoin from public to private, which may be viewed as a direct hostile move.
But It's Still Easily Accessible...
Find one of the many wallets that support taproot transactions for Bitcoin, and you'll just need to take the step of transferring your Bitcoin from an exchange, to your wallet, then sending it out.
You should be keeping your BTC on a wallet you control anyway.
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Author: Justin Derbek
New York News Desk / Global Crypto Press
Breaking Crypto News
Speed up a Bitcoin transaction - something most people will someday need following a transaction that just seems to be stuck on unconfirmed.
There's a few paid services out there that will accelerate or unfreeze a stuck Bitcoin transaction, or maybe you just want to speed up a bitcoin transaction because you're in a hurry. But today we're just focusing on the best free bitcoin transaction accelerators.
Bitcoin Transaction Accelerators are off-chain tools that can be used when you've sent a transaction and notice it lagging. The problem usually is that you didn't set the miner fees high enough, and they choose the most valuable transactions first. These tools will add some Staoshi's to hopefully attract some miners to process your transaction.
For all of these you'll need your transaction ID, all wallets and exchanges will show you this after you've hit send and it looks something like:
474339712a64f539ef77e962bc534d95373866ce074557ae24e098d69ceb8ec7
(May also be labeled 'TXID' for short)
Best free Bitcoin transaction accelerators:List Updated 3/24/2022
BitAccelerate
Free bitcoin accelerator that also promises to respect user privacy, stating "we do not collect data". Just don't use more than once every 6 hours or you may find yourself banned.
Go to: https://bitaccelerate.com/
Via BTC
This bitcoin transaction accelerator has both a free and paid version, they do 100 free ones per hour so there's a chance it will say the free service is unavailable. In that case, use one of the others listed.
Go to: https://www.viabtc.com/tools/txaccelerator/
BTC Nitro
A totally free site that "rebroadcasts your transaction through up to 30 Blockchain nodes" to speed up a bitcoin transaction...
Go to: https://btcnitro.com/
Cryptocurrency 360
One of the newer additions, unfreeze or speed up your transaction free..
Go to: https://cryptocurrency360.com/bitcoin-accelerator/
BitTools
A favorite for many people, reliable btc transaction accelerator.
Go to: https://bittools.net/bitcoin-transaction-accelerator
CyberHub
Newest to the list.
Go to: https://cyber-hub.pw/bitcoin_transaction_accelerator.php
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Author: Adam Lee
Asia News Desk
Speed Up Bitcoin Transactions
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Bitcoin mining is an important part of the bitcoin ecosystem. Miners who participate in mempools help to confirm transactions for which they receive a reward once a transaction is cleared. Usually, the mempool is ‘free’ and transactions go through easily with low fees but there are times when the mempool fills up causing transactions fees to surge. This was what took place at the start of March. Bitcoin Transaction Fees Surge At the beginning of the month, bitcoin had experienced higher transaction fees. These higher fees were as a result of transaction clustering in the mempool. Once the mempool has filled to a point where there were too many transactions to confirm, fees had invariably gone up given that transactions are confirmed based on the fee they carry. So transactions with higher fees had been confirmed first. Related Reading | Why Is Bitcoin So Volatile, Anyway? Fidelity Digital Assets Explains In order to compete in this pool that had filled up, incoming transactions had to carry a higher transaction fee per vByte (virtual byte) which is the size of the transaction. This caused fees to climb starting on March 1st and continuing for the next two days. These increased transaction fees had seen the average transaction fees per day rise for the past week to $691,000. BTC recovers above $40K | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView.com This volume had packed on the second day, March 2nd, where transactions fees climbed as high as $1.3 million. However, by the third day, miners had been able to clear all of the transactions in the mempool, although at high transaction fees, and the mempool was empty by the third day, March 3rd. Transaction fees had subsequently fallen flowing this clearance. Miner Revenues Up Bitcoin transaction fees were not the only that to record a surge as miner revenues had also recorded an uptick. Daily miner revenues for the same time period had also gone up by 6%. However, this was actually due to the price recovery that BTC had seen over the past week as hashrate had fallen once again in the same save-day period. BTC hashrate falls | Source: Arcane Research As for the transaction fees, even though there had been a significant uptick over this one-week period, fees were still comparatively low. They have been at one of their lowest for the last seven months and the recent surge did not come close to the high points recorded in the history of the digital asset. Related Reading | Crypto Market Crumbles To Extreme Fear, Is It Time To Buy? Transactions per day were also up 3.04% from the previous week. Fees per day jumped 99.81% and the average number of transactions was up by 2.54%. Only the number of blocks per hour was down for the time period, falling slightly by 1.67%. Featured image from Investopedia, chart from TradingView.com
Although Bitcoin’s network transaction fees have decreased and a portion of the unconfirmed transfer backlog has diminished, the protocol still grapples with over 289,000 transactions awaiting confirmation. As of this writing, more than 218 blocks must be processed to fully alleviate this congestion. Bitcoin’s Lingering Transaction Backlog Data collected on May 20, 2023, at 1:35 [...]
The post Bitcoin Transaction Backlog Shrinks, but Over 289,000 Still Await Confirmation appeared first on Crypto Breaking News.
Blockchain analytics platform Nansen announced the launch of its Bitcoin (BTC) on-chain analytics to bring real-time, detailed insights into the flagship cryptocurrency, enabling users to track key on-chain metrics in the platform. Related Reading: Ethereum To Move Sideways For 2-3 Months? Analyst Says Longer ETH Consolidation Is Needed Nansen Brings Real-Time On-Chain Analytics For Bitcoin On Thursday, Nansen introduced its Bitcoin Growth Dashboard to provide a detailed view of the flagship cryptos market movements and address the lack of user-friendly tracking tools for in-depth analysis in the market. The analytics platform noted that examining Bitcoins network at the same level as other blockchains has been difficult since most tools use outdated address labeling, fragmented data, or require advanced technical skills to extract meaning insights. As a result, the new Bitcoin on-chain analytics aims to bring the same depth of data that Nansen users have relied on for Ethereum and other blockchains to Bitcoin by enabling traders, institutions, and analysts to monitor active addresses, transactions, and the principal entities interacting on the network. Alex Svanevik, Nansens CEO, shared his excitement about Bitcoin analytics, explaining that users can use the platform to monitor detailed key BTC on-chain metrics: Bitcoin is the most important asset in crypto, and were thrilled to finally bring Nansens industry-leading analytics to BTC. With our platform, users can now track Bitcoins key onchain metrics with the same level of detail and precision they expect from Nansen. The new data aggregation will allow users to see the exchanges and entities that move the most BTC to tackle the guesswork on whether the transaction spikes are retail-drive, institutional-driven, or exchange reshuffling. Users can also observe BTCs liquidity and supply shift in real time to identify crucial trends before they hit the broader market. Additionally, they can track the crypto markets sentiment with address activity data, offering users a new way to gauge Bitcoins adoption and investor sentiment. BTC Transactions See 42% Daily Surge Nansens new Bitcoin on-chain analytics revealed exchange dominance and shifts in network activity. According to the analytics platform, the largest Bitcoin-active entities include some of the worlds biggest crypto exchanges. The data shows that Binance, Bybit, OKX, Robinhood, and KuCoin are among the top 5 BTC-active exchanges. Binance dominates the list with 40.68% of tracked BTC transaction activity, followed by Bybits 23.36% and OKXs 18.88%. Meanwhile, Robinhood continues to emerge as a key Bitcoin custodian with its 8.72% share, Nansen pointed out. It also noted that the network trend shows significant transaction spikes between April and June 2024, likely fueled by institutional moves, major market events, and mine behavior changes. In the past 24 hours, the number of Bitcoin active addresses has declined by 16.82% to around 462,390, suggesting network activity has slowed. The number of active addresses has hovered between 335,000 and 668,000 since September, surpassing the 600,000 mark several times since the November US elections. Related Reading: Solana Risks Further Drop Amid $180 Support Retest Is The SOL Memecoin Fiesta Over? Nonetheless, BTC transactions recorded a 42.33% increase during the past day, surging to approximately 453,600, which signals a demand for block space. Lastly, the on-chain analytics platform also revealed that it will introduce Token God Mode and Nansen Profiler for BTC in the coming weeks to offer deeper insights into wallet behaviors, transaction flows, and market trends. Featured Image from Unsplash.com, Chart from TradingView.com
A sluggish Bitcoin price performance has not been the only disappointing theme for the largest crypto market so far in 2025. According to the latest on-chain data, the Bitcoin network fundamentals have been dwindling since the final quarter of last year. Bitcoin’s Active Addresses And Transaction Count On A Decline? In a Quicktake post on the CryptoQuant platform, a crypto analyst with the pseudonym Yonsei_dent explained how recent price stagnation is tied to declining network activity. One of the relevant on-chain indicators here is the Active Addresses (AA) metric, which measures the number of wallet addresses involved in a transaction within a specific period. Related Reading: $1,000 Solana? Analyst Says Its Written, Predicts When Breakout Will Happen Usually, the Active Addresses metric is used to evaluate investor sentiment on a particular blockchain. According to Yonsei_dent, the number of active addresses on the Bitcoin network is steadily declining, suggesting a “potential weakness in investor participation.” Additionally, a “death cross” recently formed between the AA’s 30-day moving average (30DMA) and its 365-day moving average (365DMA). For context, a “death cross” in technical analysis refers to a bearish signal marked by a short-term moving average crossing below a longer-term moving average. This death cross signals a bearish momentum is forming and that a prolonged downward trend (for both price and network activity) might be on the horizon. Yonsei_dent added: While the two metrics have been fluctuating in a tight range, the 365DMA remains in a downward trend, suggesting a prolonged slowdown in network engagement. Furthermore, another on-chain metric spotlighted by the Quicktake analyst is Transaction Count, which measures the number of unique transactions on the network within a specific period. According to data from CryptoQuant, the number of unique transactions on the Bitcoin network has been declining since Q4 2024. Yonsei_dent associated this worrying trend with the global macroeconomic uncertainty and increasing risk aversion that has plagued the market since US President Donald Trump took the Oval Office. What Next For BTC Price? As inferred earlier, the declining network activity does not exactly bode well for the Bitcoin price action. Periods of low transaction activity have often coincided with prolonged sideways movement and sometimes price corrections. This trend might explain the price performance of the premier cryptocurrency in 2025. The Bitcoin price has struggled to maintain any serious bullish momentum to push new highs. Related Reading: XRP To 3 Digits? The Signs That Could Confirm It, Basketball Analyst Says As of this writing, the price of Bitcoin sits just above $97,700, reflecting a measly 0.3% increase in the past 24 hours. The coin’s weekly record is not any better, as the market leader has increased by barely 1% in the last seven days. Featured image from iStock, chart from TradingView
Data shows that Bitcoin active addresses have sharply dropped despite the high transaction demand; here’s why this may be happening. Bitcoin Active Addresses Have Seen A Sharp Plunge Recently According to the latest weekly report from Glassnode, the active addresses are around cyclical lows of 566,000. The “active addresses” metric measures the daily number of unique Bitcoin addresses participating in some transaction activity on the blockchain. By “unique,” what’s meant here is that the indicator only checks whether an address has been involved in a transfer at least once. This implies that regardless of how many transactions an address might make, its contribution to the active addresses metric will remain just one unit. This restriction exists because the number of unique addresses can serve as an analog to the number of unique users visiting the blockchain, thus providing an estimate for the daily users on the network. Another indicator that’s made for tracking activity on the Bitcoin blockchain is the “transaction count,” which, as its name already suggests, tells us about the daily total number of transfers taking place on the network. When this metric has a high value, it naturally means that many transactions occur on the blockchain. Such indicator values imply a high demand for using the network currently, but the metric can’t say anything about how the activity is distributed; that’s where the active addresses indicator comes in. Related Reading: Bitcoin Miners Continue To Sell, Bearish Sign? Now, here is a chart that shows the trend in the Bitcoin transaction count (as well as its 30-day and 365-day simple moving averages) over the entire history of the asset: The value of the metric seems to have sharply surged recently | Source: Glassnode's The Week Onchain - Week 20, 2023 As displayed in the above graph, the Bitcoin transaction count has recently seen a rapid rise and has hit a new all-time high of about 682,000 daily transfers. The reason behind this explosion in the transaction count is the emergence of the BRC-20 tokens, fungible tokens created on the BTC blockchain using the Ordinals protocol (a way to inscribe data like text and images directly into the chain). These BRC-20 tokens have started a new memecoin mania, with PEPE being the largest example of such a coin. The insanely fast popularity of these tokens has meant that the demand for transacting on the network is more than ever before. What about the active addresses, though? Is this indicator also seeing a rise? Looks like the metric has plunged recently | Source: Glassnode's The Week Onchain - Week 20, 2023 From the chart, it’s apparent that the active addresses observed a rise at first, but then it plunged to a value of 566,000 addresses per day, around the current cyclical low. Related Reading: Stablecoins Interest Spikes As Traders Look To Exit Market This would mean that while the demand for making transactions is super high right now, the demand isn’t actually coming from a large number of users but a rather small number of them who are constantly making repeat transfers. “This is a curious scenario, whereby many BRC-20 users appear to have re-used their Bitcoin addresses,” explains Glassnode. “Perhaps due to having more familiarity with how account-based chains like Ethereum or Solana operate, and less so with the Bitcoin UTXO system.” BTC Price At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $27,400, down 1% in the last week. BTC has shot up over the last 24 hours | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView Featured image from Kanchanara on Unsplash.com, charts from TradingView.com, Glassnode.com
Bank of America has come under scrutiny after a Coinbase user claimed that the bank closed his account over Bitcoin transactions. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong quickly addressed the issue, asking other users if they have encountered the same problem with Bank of America. Coinbase’s CEO Raises Concerns Over Account Closures at Bank of America Bank [...]
The post Bank of America Faces Scrutiny After Coinbase User Alleges the Bank Closed His Account Over Bitcoin Transactions appeared first on Crypto Breaking News.
In the past week, the Bitcoin network has made progress in resolving its congestion issues. On May 7, 2023, the number of unconfirmed transactions reached an all-time high of over 500,000 transfers, causing a major backlog. However, as of today, that number has been reduced to 263,406. Currently, 184 blocks need to be cleared to [...]
The post Bitcoin Makes Progress in Clearing Backlog, but Lightning Network Capacity and Channels Dropped Amid Congestion appeared first on Crypto Breaking News.
Bitcoin has a current market capitalization of roughly $1.9 trillion and surpassed silver's $1.6 trillion market cap in 2024.
The Bitcoin Request for Comment Protocol (BRC-20) is dominating crypto transactions, with 65% of all mined transactions yesterday being tied to the protocol - a new record.
The sudden explosion in popularity has also sparked debate; is BRC-20 now one of crypto's 'top protocols' and should be regarded similarly to Ethereum's ERC-20 protocol? Or, as some claim, are we seeing a temporary trend built on memecoins that are unlikely to experience any long term success?
Not the First Time the Majority of BTC Transactions Were BRC-20 Related...
While yesterday's 65% set a new record, the majority (more than 50%) of Bitcoin transactions were related to a BRC-20 transaction for 5 of the last 9 days .
BRC-20 operates on the Ordinals protocol, which is relatively new and enables the storage of various forms of information, such as images, videos, and audios, on the Bitcoin blockchain.
Fees Bring Angry Users, Happy Miners...
Unfortunately, this has led to high congestion and exorbitant fees for processing transactions on the Bitcoin network, causing frustration for regular users.
Miners, on the other hand, are reaping the rewards - some are claiming to have "never earned this much before".
Over 650 BTC (approximately $18,200,000) has already been spent on fees for the 3,755,000+ BRC-20 transactions to date.
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Author: Justin Derbek
New York News Desk
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In a day when Bitcoin prices are crashing, posting worrying drops from April 2023 peaks, the underlying network is processing record transactions. Bitcoin Prices Dropping, But Why? Dune Analytics data on May 1 shows that the platform is processing record transactions which, if going by historical performance, would typically point to demand. In a normal scenario, this demand could translate to buying pressure. However, as seen in the chart below, the spike in the activity on the Bitcoin network is attributed to the non-fungible token (NFT) collection “Ordinals.” The demand for these assets has interfered with the normal on-chain dynamics. We can see a shift in preference as it relates to inscription types. Image Inscriptions ?? dominated until very recently, but have been surpassed by text based ??. Over 2.39M Inscriptions have been added to the #Bitcoin ledger, adding 9.3GB in data, and paying 212 $BTC in fees. pic.twitter.com/KZPy074WoP — glassnode (@glassnode) April 30, 2023 In that sense, despite the high block demand, BTC prices are down 4% in the past 24 hours, crashing 10% from April 2023 peaks, and are likely to clear critical support levels immediately. Notably, sellers have quickly reversed the gains of April 27. Related Reading: Bitcoin Bearish Signal: Miners Continue To Sell While Bitcoin prices remain under pressure when writing, the coin is within a broader trade range. Key reaction points remain at $31,000 on the upper hand, a level flashing with April 2023 peaks, and $26.5k on the lower end, a support level marking the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement level of the March to April trade range. Moreover, from mid-March 2023, BTC rallied approximately 60%, floating higher as the financial markets feared another meltdown in the United States banking sector. Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) experienced a bank run in March while two more crypto-centric banks, including Signature Bank, closed shop. High On Chain Activity, A New Normal For BTC? Bitcoin prices are now cooling off, looking at the performance in the daily chart. This is despite positive news based on blockchain activity. According to Dune Analytics, the Bitcoin network has processed more transactions than any other day since launching 14 years ago. On May 1, on-chain data showed that the platform processed 568,300 transactions, 78,000 more than it processed at the peaks of the 2017 Bull Run. Even though activity has exploded, an analysis of the chunk of transactions processed revealed that over 50%, or 307,000, were inscriptions from Bitcoin Ordinals. Dune data shows that the number of inscriptions is up 16% from April 29 and maintains an upward trend pointing to increasing user demand. The Bitcoin Ordinals allow users to attach or “inscribe” files on the Bitcoin network, including apps, videos, audio, images, texts, and more. Related Reading: Bitcoin Faces Potential Price Drop To $25,000, On-Chain Data Signals Bearish Trend These files are unique, “inscribed” at the Satoshi level, and permanently stored on Bitcoin blocks. The more files inscribed, the more transactions there are, explaining the “spike” in the number of on-chain transactions processed in recent days. As of May 1, over 2.9 million files were attached to the Bitcoin network, with the number of average inscriptions rising from less than 10,000 in early February to over 300,000 in early May 2023. As mentioned above, the rapid rise of “inscriptions” doesn’t necessarily translate to demand for BTC. The underlying network is a transactional layer, enabling the transfer of funds. It is not meant for storing files, a development that could dent the appeal of the most valuable blockchain and slow down BTC demand leading to a permanent spike in its transaction levels. Feature Image From iStock, Chart From TradingView
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